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فسيلة - transplant
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هي مكتبة رقمية تحتوي علي آلاف الفيديوهات العربية في جميع المجالات
It is a digital library containing thousands of Arabic videos in all fields.
قوائم تشغيل فسيلة
https://www.dailymotion.com/fasela/playlists
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LearningTranscript
00:01For everyone in the last month
00:03He only had fifty pounds.
00:06He needs to eat a meal that will satisfy him.
00:10Each one in a shredder
00:12I need a quick-digesting meal
00:14Give him energy
00:15Let him finish the exercise
00:19For everyone who doesn't know how to eat
00:21And the same in a side dish with the meal
00:23To open his mind
00:26The world needs an outside hero
00:35A true hero who can beat them
00:42The world needs potatoes
00:46Those who don't have money
00:54Those who don't have money
00:56Syrian potato sandwich eats
01:01The one who wants energy in the jinn
01:04He eats potatoes that he guards
01:11Those who want to improve their appetite for food
01:15He eats chips
01:23The world has needed a miracle for a long time.
01:26And the miracle was oxidized in the form of a human being.
01:31Potato Man
01:32Potato Man
01:41Peace be upon you, dear viewers.
01:43Welcome to the new episode of Al-Dahiyya program
01:45My dear, if God blesses you and you go to Germany
01:47I went to the Basansusee Park in Potsdam.
01:50And the peace agreement was there
01:52You will find tombs of German kings
01:54Among them is the tomb of one of the most important kings of Prussia.
01:56In the eighteenth century
01:57King Frederick II
01:59Known as Frederick the Great
02:00Abu Hamid, why don't you get involved in the matter?
02:02We want to know
02:03Oh dear, wait
02:04I'll tell you now
02:04This is a double episode.
02:06Shuha Shuha allows the tch
02:07Frederick, my dear, was lucky
02:09With great respect to the German people
02:10Military, historical, and religious visit
02:12To the point that Hitler, in order to preserve his power from destruction
02:15He ordered the coffin to be moved to a secure, secret location.
02:18With another set of treasures
02:20Okay, Abu Hamid, God willing.
02:21From the spirit of Germany
02:21We're going to visit his grave.
02:22And we'll take a bouquet of roses with us
02:23Maybe potatoes?
02:25Dear Reply
02:25If you ever go to visit his grave
02:27We didn't wither a rose
02:28What should I answer, Abu Hamid?
02:29potatoes
02:29Indeed, my dear
02:30If you go and visit his grave there
02:31You'll find people even putting potatoes on the grave.
02:33And you'll find visitors coming in with potatoes.
02:35And no one tells them anything.
02:36They fear the respectable people of the city of Min
02:37They land on the potato grave and walk away
02:39And this place closes at the clock.
02:40You, my dear
02:41One day you'll travel to Germany and get a Schengen visa
02:43You'll go and quickly pick potatoes from one grave.
02:44He died in Qurna 18
02:45So we can get married
02:46So that, my dear, we can understand this story
02:48We need to go back a little
02:491492
02:50Specifically in Spain
02:51In that moment
02:52Tristo in Columbus was preparing himself
02:53First expedition to the New World
02:55Or what he later knew as America
02:57After Columbus' voyage
02:58The world will be forever different.
02:59And I am here
03:00I'm not talking about geography and maps
03:02And the wars that happened after this discovery
03:03But I'm talking about the exchange that took place between the two worlds.
03:05Europe, Africa and Asia
03:07As an ancient world
03:08and the Americas
03:09As a new world
03:10The New World
03:10Khani was making discoveries for the first time
03:12The ancient world hears about it
03:13Let me tell you, my dear
03:14There are basic needs in European cuisine
03:17World cuisine says
03:18It did not exist in the ancient world.
03:20We discovered it in the New World
03:21For example, you have tomatoes
03:22This is a new world of discovery for Omar
03:24Imagine, my dear, that it's about discovering America
03:25There was a time when I didn't eat okra in an orange nut
03:27They did not eat without familiarity
03:28Other things
03:29The costume of the shield and the tab
03:30All these things were for the first time
03:32European sailors see it
03:34And then they moved it to Europe.
03:35India, China, and the Middle East
03:38And became key components
03:39In the lives of the inhabitants of these areas
03:41centuries ago
03:41Time limit
03:42Not only that
03:43Europeans too
03:44They transported crops to America
03:45New crops
03:46It remained an economic mission
03:47Over time they became essential needs
03:49In people's lives here
03:50Like what, for example?
03:51Coffee-like
03:51Hey Mohammed
03:52Today's coffee
03:53It is considered a Latin crop
03:54Very important
03:55It spread to Brazil and Colombia
03:57Now, take the surprise!
03:57Coffee was one of the crops
03:59Those who transmitted it to the Europeans
04:00From the Middle East
04:01For the Americas
04:02This diverse exchange
04:03It was known as the Colombian Exchange
04:04In relation to
04:05Columbus
04:06Let me tell you
04:06One of the most famous of these exchanges
04:08She was
04:09potato
04:09Potatoes, potatoes, oh Muhammad!
04:11Yes, my dear
04:12Potatoes, my dear, or potatoes
04:14Its scientific name
04:15Solanum Tuppersum
04:16As for the word Potios
04:18It is derived from the Spanish word
04:19potato
04:20The origin of the Spanish word
04:21It goes back to local languages
04:23In Peru
04:23The original home of potatoes
04:25Solansi
04:26The purple
04:27Which is the eggplant
04:28O Abu Ahmad
04:29It means flat potatoes, which are from the eggplant family.
04:30What is the idea of what I want, which is heavy with some of the things
04:32close
04:32It is a root crop
04:33Samaro growing underground
04:35The story of the potato began about 350 million years ago.
04:37When it began to descend from a Semitic ancestor
04:39For eggplant
04:40And its current form
04:41In South America
04:42First discovery of wild potatoes
04:43It was near Lake Titicaca
04:45I've been to Bar'atch before, I don't want to go there.
04:46It was a thousand kilometers from the Peruvian capital.
04:49When the farmers planted it in the mountains of Indid
04:50From about 8000 years ago
04:51It was the staple food of indigenous communities
04:54In the area
04:54The first written historical reference to potatoes
04:56It was in the memoirs of the Spanish historian
04:58Pedro Siza DeLeon
04:591553
05:00In which he spoke about the Inca civilization
05:02And the Spanish discoveries there
05:03Pedro described the potatoes
05:04It is one of the main meals
05:06For the indigenous people
05:07Is it some kind of earthy part?
05:09After boiling, it becomes soft.
05:10Such as cooked chestnuts
05:11This is the best way to describe potatoes
05:13This is the traditional shape of potatoes.
05:15Which is mashed potatoes
05:16If they had seen the French fries
05:17They didn't build a civilization
05:18All of us
05:18By my action, Aziz, the Spaniard began
05:20Potato squash is among the new discoveries
05:22From the year 1570 to the year 1600
05:24Potatoes have reached all parts of Europe
05:26First of all, my dear, let me tell you
05:27The Europeans rejected the potatoes
05:29Especially since it is a root vegetable
05:31Samaru emerges from the underground roots in the fig tree.
05:33These are plants that were not common in Europe.
05:35The opposite of carrots, for example
05:36The one who was taking the world by storm in the Middle East and Asia
05:38Also, my dear, if you spread the potatoes
05:40It doesn't look nice and its colors aren't vibrant.
05:41handsome lime plant
05:43It's not even time for cucumber preparation.
05:44Nor the colors of tomatoes
05:45For my dear
05:46Tomatoes that have become popular as ornamental plants
05:48When Europe was nurtured because of its color
05:49My dear imagination, you're going to get a bunch of tomatoes.
05:51My dear imagination, Europe was practicing racism on plants.
05:53Of course, something like green onions was a hit in the first round.
05:56That's why, my dear, potato hand started to gain a bad seven
05:58Many radiations showed that it was an evil plant.
06:01Radiation, according to old books, causes diseases.
06:03The uniform of leprosy, syphilis, and death, and the judge
06:05They said, "Please"
06:07Yes, please cancel the combo for me.
06:09I don't want potatoes
06:10I don't want potatoes
06:11They also said it destroys the soil in which it grew.
06:13Solution remained
06:14He chose seventeen and over the course of one hundred years
06:15Potatoes were used primarily as animal feed.
06:18Food for the homeless
06:19But every oppressor will choose
06:21In an article by Dr. Rebecca Eyre
06:24Professor of History at the University of Warwick
06:25Titled
06:29How humble were the potatoes
06:31Fuel for igniting the fuse of liberal capitalism
06:34I'm so tired
06:35Please don't call me modest
06:36I just got some oil
06:38In the eighteenth century, European countries began
06:40Reconsidering the rules of the cypress and national forces
06:43Any country that wants to grow must achieve two things
06:45Famines and poor storage
06:46And countries that were and rescued him for centuries in Europe
06:48That's why
06:49There should have been some consideration given to new dietary systems.
06:52Systems that have the capacity to increase the population
06:55And improving their health and productivity
06:57In his book, he issued the year 1797
06:59Titled: Notes on the Diet of the General Public
07:03Scottish physician William Beauchamp said
07:05The reason for the storage problem
07:06Most people eat meat, bread, shab, and beer.
07:09They don't eat enough vegetables.
07:11This was a sale of diseases like sclerosis
07:12This is a disease caused by a vitamin C deficiency.
07:14The one that is in the space
07:15This caused general weakness and fatigue.
07:17Even if you don't get involved
07:18Its complications can lead to death.
07:20These are diseases, my dear, that I hadn't thought about.
07:21It puts into production
07:22And the British economy is shrinking
07:24If we don't have well-nourished people
07:26Huda doesn't work
07:26You won't be able to make a strong Josh
07:28So, the feeding mechanism was a real problem.
07:29Whereas, for example
07:30The security barrier was a staple food in Europe.
07:32And every 100 grams of flour
07:33It provides much more calories
07:35From 100 grams of vegetables
07:36Unless he remains
07:37Some vegetables
07:38Specifically potatoes
07:40They had an important advantage
07:41It's hot and crispy, Abu Ahmeil
07:42no
07:43Kanoush is still working, my dear
07:44Zeta is important
07:45The advantage of potatoes
07:46Despite the calorie difference
07:47Not speeds
07:48Productivity of the same area
07:51cultivated from the land
07:52potato plant
07:53approximately equal
07:546 times
07:55Amh productivity
07:56Meaning simplicity
07:57The production that will come to you
07:58From a land with potatoes
07:596 times the production you will receive
08:00If he planted it, he would erase it.
08:01So,
08:02Calories
08:03The one in the eraser is more
08:04But
08:04We can do it
08:05More potatoes
08:06Therefore
08:07More calories work
08:08Also, my dear
08:09Potatoes are distinguished
08:10Because it resists pests
08:11Also potatoes
08:12You can eat it
08:13In its initial form
08:14You are clothes
08:14You need to get it wet
08:15But a need like a mother
08:16Needs treatment
08:17So you can eat it
08:17Not a structure, just a barefoot one
08:18This is different
08:19Potato farming
08:20Much easier
08:32For example
08:32They were eating potatoes with relish
08:33The one full of Vitamin C
08:35Because of the registration of its storage on ships
08:36They were less susceptible to infection
08:38We will not encourage expansion.
08:39In the use of carrot vegetables
08:41Potatoes
08:41Potatoes' shares increased
08:43To the point that an attack began
08:44On traditional European food
08:46Which is represented in living
08:47meat
08:47The martyred economist
08:48Smith's pain
08:49Those who emphasized the importance of potatoes
08:50A solution to save the national economy
08:52He attacked in his articles
08:53butcher shops
08:54And bakeries
08:55And he asked them
08:56And reduce their enslavement
08:57As a food source
08:58And increasing the reliance on potatoes
08:59Not only that
09:00European support for potatoes
09:01What is the point of thinking?
09:02and doctors
09:02And a book, that's all.
09:03Oh Abu Hafudi
09:04President Biden intervened
09:05my dear
09:05The topic is the shift to government support.
09:07Live
09:07and indirect
09:08Money Frederick II
09:10yeah
09:10Those who put potatoes on his grave
09:11A man convinced by the potato diet
09:12But the Germans rejected it
09:14Perhaps more than the rest of Europe
09:15They decided that he was using a certain trick.
09:17Frederick ordered that a piece of his land be planted with potatoes.
09:20It was placed under heavy guard.
09:21Spreading rumors about potatoes, their strength, and their benefits
09:24It is a magical plant
09:25And indeed, the movement gained influence among the Germans.
09:27They began to plant potatoes
09:28And I won't implement it
09:29Follow
09:29What do you see of the magical plant that the owner, Frederick, grows?
09:32And he placed guards on it.
09:33This definitely cures high blood pressure and diabetes.
09:34And it treats public health
09:36And indeed, the Germans began to grow potatoes.
09:38Potato imports are gaining widespread popularity
09:40The potato advertisement has reached all of Europe.
09:43For example, in Paris
09:44Tweedry Garden was excavated
09:45The one overlooking the Twaidri Al-Maliki palace
09:47It also overlooks the Louvre Museum.
09:49After it was dug up, it was planted with potatoes.
09:51The sargad, my dear
09:51Marie Antoinette Myratt, Queen of France
09:53The potato flower began to fall into her hair
09:55To show her love for potatoes
09:57In Italy and Spain
09:58The press reported on the benefits of potatoes
10:00And spread the methods of boiling and steaming them
10:02All possible means of spreading the potato industry
10:05All European countries have followed this path
10:06She knows people
10:07How to grow potatoes and eat them
10:08By 19
10:10Potatoes were present on almost all European stoves.
10:13It remained a key part of European criminal culture
10:15Dr. Nathan Nun
10:17Professor of Economics at Harvard University
10:18He says in a study in 2011
10:19Titled
10:23Published in
10:26This man said
10:26Between the year 1000 and the year 1900 AD
10:29The population increased from 300 million to 1.6 billion.
10:32But the rate of increase was not constant.
10:34Most of the actual increase and growth occurred in the last 200 years.
10:38Specifically from 1700 to 1900
10:40As is clear in the image in front of you
10:41We see that this increase has many causes.
10:43But he says that potatoes and their use as a staple food
10:46Misalat alone accounts for 25% of the reasons for population growth.
10:50During this period
10:51But my dear
10:52As we've shown you in this program, everything good has a short lifespan.
10:55The potatoes that the kings used to satisfy people's hunger
10:57They face the risk of famine
10:59It will be one of the reasons for the biggest revolutionary waves in Europe and the world.
11:03In the mid-18th century
11:05The reliance on potatoes had reached its peak in Europe.
11:08Ireland, for example, used to provide its inhabitants with 80% of their calories from potatoes.
11:12An average adult consumes five and a half kilos per day
11:16Oh my God, so much!
11:17Not necessarily, my dear
11:18The five groups of potatoes were eaten
11:20But they also used it for export.
11:22It had economic activity
11:23But at 10:45, the markets of Europe became a nightmare.
11:26When a group of ships coming from the Americas arrive at Irish ports
11:29This time, my dear, the ships weren't just loaded with cargo.
11:32But it was carrying a very large epidemic on potatoes.
11:36late blight
11:37The ships that first carried potatoes to Ireland three centuries ago
11:41The epidemic took the disease with it.
11:43This epidemic has swept across all of Europe
11:44But the situation in Ireland was far more severe than in any other region.
11:47The first year of the epidemic destroyed a third of the crop.
11:49And the second year, he killed ninety percent of it.
11:51The situation in Ireland was disastrous
11:53But what was even more disastrous was Britain's reaction.
11:55Which at that time was the richest empire in the world
11:58And Ireland has no print.
11:59England not only failed to provide significant blood to stop this famine
12:02No! This continued to improve taxes and rents.
12:04Exporting agricultural products
12:06Dude, we're dying
12:07Even agricultural death
12:09Let me tell you that this famine caused
12:11In the death of one million people in Ireland
12:13And about a million other people decided to sell
12:15Every enemy and they migrate in the largest wave
12:17Irish immigration to the United States
12:19Historically, potato crop shortages were caused by
12:21One of the main reasons for the explosion of the situation in Europe
12:23Potatoes in Europe will not be just
12:25A staple food crop, not a delicacy
12:27A rich man's predicament! The absence of potatoes at the
12:29The European peasant in the 19th century meant that
12:31His life is in danger! Not just his life! It's the life of his family!
12:33And what's wrong with him! Let's leave him alone!
12:35My dear, the idea that potatoes were an easy meal!
12:37No experience in preparation or cooking is needed.
12:39One dish that the farmer can eat
12:40He eats his children and he eats his animals!
12:42This is also good because it is easy to grow and store!
12:44Dear potato viewer, there was a possible Hamza.
12:46Don't feel it now that you can hide it underground
12:49And there's nothing wrong with it! Why hide it, Abu Ahmed? It's a big deal!
12:51Keep in mind that we are talking about Europe in the 19th and 18th centuries!
12:54When it's very likely! A harvest that will speed up the crop!
12:56Even if you weren't robbed, you'll find the proceeds from the taxes or any type of rental you have.
12:59He comes to take your crop and the rent or the tax.
13:01Wesbok is spending a cold winter without any food!
13:04Van Gogh, the famous painter
13:05When he decided to paint a picture that expresses the life of the European peasant
13:07He chose to paint the famous Potato Eaters painting
13:101885
13:11In which potatoes appear as an essential part of the farmer's life
13:14And when the poor classes found that their basic food was a treasure
13:17A treasure that is no longer available
13:18The year 1848 began with a series of disturbances and protests.
13:22More than 50 European countries
13:23All of this happened almost simultaneously and without coordination from the farmers.
13:26Because Europe was a feudal society
13:28And he refused to give to the peasants and workers.
13:30In fact, there are still countries that use the serf system.
13:32It is a system akin to slavery for peasants in some countries.
13:35The last batch of potatoes was so expensive that the farmers there became very attached to it.
13:38The change is huge in Europe
13:39Take note: a nationalist uprising in Ireland led by the Young Irish Movement.
13:43Unfortunately, this uprising failed.
13:45And also the end of absolute monarchy in Denmark
13:47The abolition of the serf system in Austria
13:49The image is from 1848
13:50February photo in France
13:52And the establishment of the Second French Republic
13:54March photo in Germany
13:55Which is considered the first attempt to unify the German states
13:58This statement prompted countries to implement reforms to avoid similar incidents.
14:01Not only that
14:02Potatoes indirectly changed the shape of Europe
14:04For example, there are countries that are implementing reforms.
14:06To avoid anything happening
14:07Dutch uniform
14:08The one who decided to make a constitutional change to reduce the effectiveness of the king's decrees
14:11And the Swiss ambassador who drafted the constitution in 1848
14:14Potatoes were a major factor in shaping the Western world.
14:16In the current image we see
14:18Potatoes from the 18th century until the end of World War I
14:20It had a revolutionary impact on the lives of Western people.
14:23It is no less impactful than railways and carriages.
14:25Potatoes were a form of insurance against famine.
14:27It is the fuel for the workers in all great achievements.
14:30It is the food of soldiers in war.
14:31Dear sir, it was also used in bank loans.
14:34My dear uncle, go to Tahd Qardaf, he'll ask you about the guarantee.
14:36She tells him, "I have two sacks of potatoes."
14:38It's not a loss to keep the depression department.
14:40Let's, my friend, look up the potatoes by date.
14:41We drain it and go into the kitchen
14:43Azizi potatoes were easy and cheap
14:45Go to any country and you'll be a pro at its kitchen.
14:47The potatoes were spreading and adapting to the kitchen shaker's rhythm.
14:49Today, potatoes have reached the point of being ranked the 4th most popular food globally.
14:53After rice, wheat, and corn
14:54For example, you might find it as gratin with béchamel sauce in France.
14:56Jamjoon with fried onions in Korea
14:58The Khafsani woman is coming to your house.
15:00This is of course in addition to the nature that has captivated the whole world.
15:03French fries
15:04French fries
15:05Can I tell you that if you go to Google Translate
15:07And I let him translate French fries for you
15:09He won't tell you fried potatoes
15:10He'll tell you French fries
15:12Buhamad, let me ask this question that I've wanted to ask them for a long time.
15:14Is it called French fries?
15:15Does that mean she's originally from France?
15:17Honestly, Azib, this is a question that I'm trying to answer.
15:19Let whoever tells you that French fries are a point of contention between many countries ignore them.
15:22Belgians, for example, say that food fried in fat...
15:24Victorious in their Belgian kitchen
15:26They have a dish called fried fish fingers.
15:28Its origin is the Sukel al-Kharawiyin al-Anhar al-Miz
15:31Those who bring the fish and cut it into finger-shaped pieces
15:33They fry it in animal fat and eat it.
15:34Description of 1680 when winter was new to them
15:37So much so that the rivers froze over the Belgians
15:39They decided to fry potatoes instead of fish.
15:40They called them French fries.
15:43Does he tell you that at the same time
15:44The French brothers say that the potatoes are fried
15:47Theirs, and the whole world knew about it for the first time
15:49The 18 decided when the sellers started selling potatoes in sticks
15:52Browned in animal fat
15:53On a body named Pont Neuf in Paris
15:55They named it Pont Nov
15:57I'm not surrendering right now, Abu Hamid.
15:58Is she French or Belgian?
16:00Honestly, my dear, I don't want to tell you about this general problem.
16:01They are Americans
16:02American squatters during their presence in southern Belgium
16:05The first workers welcome
16:05They discovered French fries and loved them.
16:07And since southern Belgium speaks French
16:10The American rats took the potatoes with them to America.
16:12They called it French fries
16:13The border is currently in dispute between Belgium and France
16:15Two dreams of the French fry owner
16:17Both countries are fighting to prove their historical rights.
16:20In the invention of French fries
16:22Belgium presented the UNESCO replica
16:24Make sure that the fried potatoes
16:25Belgian cultural symbol
16:26She also opened a museum that is the first of its kind in the world.
16:28Tell me, my dear, I'll introduce you to The Fright Museum
16:30In the city of Brosh
16:31The museum presents a history of the French fry industry.
16:34And my dear, the museum model entered, standing there with a bib, just like Mama.
16:36And everyone who gets close
16:37Do not touch
16:38Don't touch the exhibitors until they leave.
16:40Let me tell you that there's also the struggle to prove who owns the high-quality potatoes.
16:43It was used in diplomatic disputes at times
16:46For example, what happened in 2003
16:47When America came forward with its proposal to enter Al-Alaa
16:50The French government announced its rejection of the American proposal.
16:52Is America silent?
16:53No, she'll make French fries.
16:55Oh Abu Ahmed, you severed relations and expelled the ambassador.
16:57Did you get burned by French pens?
16:59No, my dear, America is much more protected than that.
17:01House Speaker Bob Nye decides
17:04This man makes a very firm decision
17:06Listen, France
17:07We're going to change the name of the high-quality potatoes in the Congress restaurant's video.
17:10From French fries to Freedom fries
17:35Oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooow Wooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooow
17:36What can I tell you, my dear, that it's not just the US Congress that's picking at potatoes?
17:39Doctors too
17:40Don't forget that the potato's greatest strength is also its biggest problem.
17:42Potatoes are the first, second, and third foods in the list of prohibited foods in any diet.
17:46A meal that is high in calories and fat
17:48But that didn't stop it from being number one in the world of fast food.
17:51In 2021, the value of the global French fry market reached
17:55According to Fortune Business Insight, the total value exceeds $15 billion.
17:59Which is expected to reach $22 billion in 2029
18:02But my dear, that's a very important question we must ask.
18:05What does it mean that potatoes are the only plant?
18:06The one who easily managed to squeeze himself into the kitchen of any country
18:09It creates nutritional, cultural, economic, and political impacts, and generates anxiety in every decision.
18:13My dear uncle, all these geographical areas and lands
18:16No land or soil said no to potatoes.
18:17Every time we put it in, it spreads like this
18:19Let me tell you that potatoes, as the doctor describes them in Pica Air
18:22She is the most successful immigrant in the world
18:24To the point that his original homeland is no longer known.
18:26Neither with producers nor with consumers
18:28In an article published in Nitsha magazine
18:30We'll see a study that examines the historical origins of potatoes.
18:32Eurasian or Eurasian
18:33Why does it currently represent 82% of the potatoes grown globally?
18:37Scientists discovered that potatoes were grown in the Andes Mountains
18:40And then I went to Europe
18:49Do you grow them in Siberia?
18:50You can plant it in the pot, my dear.
18:51Ultimately, dear food, is a cultural element.
18:54It expresses the identity of each country through its currency.
18:56But sometimes when I eat it, it is distinguished by its quality
18:58And a huge amount of money for the Takaif
19:00The fruit of Betgenz itself grows in any land.
19:01Because after a short time its presence became ingrained in the culture and food of the inhabitants
19:05And it turns into eating through the carat
19:06For cultures and languages
19:08A food that can accommodate the story of every country
19:10He is able to eat the food of kings and the food of the birds
19:12Inspiration for artists like Fango
19:13Economists like Adam Smith
19:15You and your family, and we're going crazy
19:16Those who like it with tahini
19:17Those who like it with ketchup and mayonnaise
19:18Those who love it, go potato
19:19For those who love chips
19:20Every man has his own style
19:21A dish capable of wars and images
19:23And the ascents of the Saharan and the historical
19:25This might make us stop and think.
19:26Is this a Madras plant?
19:27It might inspire us to see its advantages
19:29In adaptation and flexibility
19:30But we don't see this as a reason for war.
19:31It is a reason for cooperation between us as human beings
19:33To transform it from just a meal
19:34The meaning of "He is able to liberate us and save us"
19:36Does he say to you, my dear
19:36The year 2008
19:37United Meeting
19:38She announced that this year
19:39potato year
19:40International Yerov Potatoes
19:41This is because, despite the conflicts surrounding her
19:43The most popular vegetables remained
19:45And the most preferred in the world
19:46And the most present in all matches
19:48And sometimes it surpasses cultural dishes
19:50Confined only within her country's borders
19:51This is according to what the Greeks say.
19:52This makes it the hope for providing food security.
19:54And eradicating poverty
19:55And these, my dear, are the two greatest dangers facing humanity.
19:57He hears me
19:58People, my dear
19:59Despite their different layers
20:00and its colors
20:00and her gender
20:01Her material, social, and health conditions
20:03Everyone, my dear, eats potatoes
20:05Our potato god is what unites us
20:06Let's take the metaphor to its extreme.
20:08Let's replace the blood with ketchup.
20:09War bandages in the kitchen
20:11And the annoying sound of the peep peep
20:12With a soothing, cheeky tone
20:14That's all, my dear
20:15Don't forget to download the previous episodes.
20:16And climb the next rings
20:17Download and crush sources
20:18Even if you're on YouTube
20:19Subscribe to the channel
20:20In this, my dear, I want to convey a message about potatoes.
20:22And I'm a worker who's been working hard and I'm being fragrant
20:23With negative feelings towards her
20:24And I'm not a fool, I'll forget you
20:26Oh round one, oh red one
20:27Oh, crushed one, oh, crushed one
20:28Oh, half fried
20:29Oh, you who serve every tray with a hundred onions
20:31I can live without you, my dear.
20:32Honestly, no
20:32I'm eating combo
20:33The sandwich must be served with fries.
20:34And the mother of potatoes and the mother of the good times in the sandwich
20:36So when I get a sandwich with fries
20:37From the two forbidden things, in regret