

As Jamie prepared his dish, he glazed a bowl with olive oil before putting the cooked egg fried rice.While giving reference to Asian cooking, Uncle Roger said, "one preserves the shape of the tofu and serves it that way." As the video and recipe progressed further, Jamie mixed tofu with the fried rice, breaking it up with his hands.While calling it "disgusting", Jamie asked, "what are you going to put in there next, peanut butter?" Jamie Oliver's cooking method once again managed to annoy Uncle Roger when the former used "chilli jam".While highlighting the same, Uncle Roger asserted, "Imagine ordering noodles in a Japanese restaurant, and they serve you instant noodles". According to Uncle Roger's friend rice review, the fourth thing which was wrong with Jamie's method was the use of pre-cooked rice.Elaborating the reason, Uncle Roger said, "Spring onion is only to be used as garnish". Adding the third thing on the list, Uncle Roger called out Oliver for sauteing spring onion in the oil.He further poked fun at him as he said, "Are you making a salad?". As Jamie instructed to use olive oil, Uncle Roger said, "Who uses olive oil for fried rice?". The second thing which Jamie got wrong was the olive oil. In July 2020 Malaysian comic Nigel Ng went viral overnight.He exclaimed, "The wok gives the food flavour. Quick to express his disappointment, Uncle Roger mocked Jamie for not using a wok. His YouTube channel has nearly half of a billion views. The very first thing to which Uncle Roger reacted was when the video started showing Jamie preparing the dish in a saucepan. Uncle Roger is the creation of Nigel Ng, a Malaysian Chinese comedian who now lives in London.How long will he don the orange shirt? “Until I’m sick of it,” he said.Things Jamie Oliver's egg fried rice method went wrong with Deep-sea explorers said Saturday they had located the wreck of a World War II Japanese transport ship, the Montevideo Maru, which was torpedoed off the Philippines, killing nearly 1,000 Australians aboard. Of course, with Uncle Roger as a special guest. Ng is looking forward to going on his first world tour when the pandemic’s over.
UNCLE ROGER PLUS
And in my comedy, I do a lot of Asian culture stuff as well, like cultural differences and little injustices we face … and when people come see Uncle Roger and my stand-up, and learn even more about Asian culture, I think that’s a plus for everybody,” he said. “People haven’t seen their parents becoming YouTubers, you know. More than his virality, Ng said that Uncle Roger’s popularity is a step towards better Asian representation in comedy. He calls his viewers “niece and nephew” and is armed with life hacks an Asian parent would have under their sleeve - like having sachets of MSG on hand and skipping the rice at a buffet. And the fact that it’s the Asian community who enjoys the most.”

“The difference between them doing it and me doing is that my version is rooted in my experience growing up in Asia, which is celebratory. He’s never mentioned that Asians eat dogs, or are good at math.” “When I do stereotypes, I think people just mean the accent,” he said. And I think both our life experiences can exist together.” “There are definitely people who were bullied because they had an accent and grew up Asian in a Western world, and that is a valid life experience. So I just had to make these the centerpieces of his dialect.” A lot of words Uncle Roger uses are words I used growing up, talking to friends in a very casual setting. But when he saw Jamies classic Asian egg fried rice recipe. So, Uncle Roger is a combination of research and my own life experiences. Nigel Ng, who goes by the name of Uncle Roger on his Youtube channel, shot to fame with another of his fried rice recipes reactions. “I know that my dad wears a belt phone case, and I see a lot of other Asian uncles wearing it too. It is moulded after the people I knew growing up - the uncle sitting at the kopitiams (coffee shops), the sassy know-it-all uncles,” Ng said. “This character is rooted in my life experience. They got made fun of, ostracized, and bullied based on how they behave and speak.”īut he said that rather than it being a caricature, Uncle Roger is an homage to his childhood in Malaysia. His YouTube channel boasts over six million subscribers who watch Ng pick apart the cooking styles, tools, and ingredients used by the chefs. “A lot of them grew up being the only Asian person in a white neighborhood where nobody understood their culture. U.K.-based Malaysian standup comedian Nigel Ng has made a name for himself as 'Uncle Roger,' the crabby uncle who calls out (mostly Western) chefs for making fried rice and other Asian dishes incorrectly. “Their fears are not unfounded, and also I try to see from their perspective too,” Ng said.
