We make and rate 8 popular Vietnamese drinks

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Published 2024-07-06
Hi, I'm Uyen Ninh but please just call me Uyen!
Originally from Vietnam, I now explore life in Germany, sharing my unique perspective through my videos on my way to be your favorite Ausländer! 😁

Subscribe to my YouTube Channel for Videos and Shorts: @uyenninh
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[email protected]

0:00 intro
0:35 Peach tea with orange and lemon grass
2:42 Green tea
4:53 Vietnamese hot milk coffee
7:45 Vietnamese egg coffee
10:43 Corn milk
13:40 Bubble tea
16:29 Black bean juice
18:38 Coconut water
20:12 Overall rating
20:38 Outr

All Comments (21)
  • German bf just coming up with some dark but funny stuff: “Oh the pig dead, it had a traffic accident”
  • @elepfly
    I did take a barista course in the past at a Vietnamese culinary school, and the instructor told me that to sterilize eggs, you can boil them for around 30s-1m in 70-degree-Celsius water, which is hot enough to kill the bacteria, esp. salmonella, without cooking the eggs. Then crack it open, and it would be safe to use the egg yolk for your egg coffee now. Updated: FYI the context I used is in Vietnam, not a first world’s country, so extra carefulness is reasonable. The risk of salmonella infection is posed when you crack the eggshells: the bacteria may infect the inner matter, especially if you separate the egg yolk by transferring it back and forth between the two halves of the cracked open shell. So pasteurizing the outer surface becomes necessary. How about the pathogens that exist inside the eggs before cracking? That’s your own risk to take when deciding to have raw eggs then.
  • @ivylovesrunning
    The peach tea looks lovely. I would eat all the fruit first. 😂 "I made with a lot of love" "10 out of 10"❤😂
  • @bas1330
    Great video. btw. eggs in Germany are very safe. The little chicken and later laying hens are vaccinated against salmonella after birth. In addition, according to poultry hygiene regulations, salmonella tests must be carried out on laying hens at least every 15 weeks, normally 8 weeks between tests.
  • @jordy8059
    Uyen: says she's going to make vegan corn milk Also Uyen: puts condensed milk in it 😂
  • I loved this video, and i thought it was really sweet that GB rated the green tea so high because it comes with conversation.
  • @duttfisch
    About the egg coffee: It's required that chickens get vaccinated against salmonella in Germany (plus there's some additional safeguards), so while raw egg is never 100% safe, the likelihood that you get sick from them here is very, very low ^^
  • The words you were looking for was corn cob, and when you used the bag to separate the liquid that is usually called "straining" (verb). So "strain it to separate the liquid and solids". Or the object you use can be called a "strainer", or commonly in america we use a "cheese cloth" for this task of separating fine particles from liquid!
  • @blarfroer8066
    The funny thing about a German rating Vietnamese coffee is that East Germany paid Vietnam to ramp up its coffee production, and that is one of the main reasons why Vietnam is the second biggest producer of coffee today.
  • Uyen if you want the egg coffee without risk of salmonella, you can whisk the egg yolk over a double boiler: It's a very traditional technique used for making creams, foams, etc. The egg yolk whips into a nice foam but the heat from the steam warms it to a safe temperature.
  • @emilyr5442
    as a nailtech I must comment a sidenote that Uyen's nails look extra pretty with this design. SHe always chooses well, but this one looks incredible
  • @damn671
    Im genuinely happy for all her success. Her energy is very light and you can tell she really enjoys what she do. Unlike many of these tik tok influencers who force a personality on camera I remember first time seeing her videos when she only had like 10,000 followers. Now she has 2.2 million. Congrats!!!
  • @suecampbell4811
    "It's good that you give our audience, uh, pretty authentic knowledge..." has to be the funniest and truest jab. Thank you German Boyfriend! (How is it that Uyen has never slipped and said your name?)
  • @vhhfynnff4458
    Oh, just wanted to add that coconut coffee is just another level. They blend coconut cream (not water) with ice to make it slushy, like ice cream, and then add filter coffee so it's mix of coffee bitterness and coconut sweetness. Amazing. 100/10
  • @ColorJoyLynnH
    I love how he takes your mother’s feelings into consideration. What a good guy.
  • @kienla4280
    The " kumquat" that you put in the peach drink may actually be calamansi. Calamansi, for those who is not familiar, is extremely popular, and extensively used, fragrant lime in Southeast Asia.
  • @monbebe8846
    hi Uyen!! i really enjoyed this video ☺️ i live in Russia and study at the Far Eastern Federal University (in Vladivostok city), and we have many vietnamese students there and they showed us how to make vietnamese coffee and i was shocked with egg coffee and also i was surprised to know that people in Vietnam drink coffee with condensed milk, i remember that we have to wait 5-6 mins until filter is done, but in my surprise this coffee were really tasty!! these vietnamese students were really cute and now i’m really interested in vietnamese culture so i’m happy that i found your channel 🥰 thanks Uyen that you make a really good content
  • @246hatta
    Trust me as a tourist that has been to Vietnam. I love their coffee culture. Worth it. Go for their ice coffee 10 out of 10
  • @montananerd8244
    11:19 I love when you can tell Uyen was raised country. There’s no way to get field corn in the big cities, I’m sure, other than robbing a corn field, even in one of the USA’s most rural places, I have no idea how to buy field corn. Also, try if you can, just once, to get pick your own sweet corn, have someone at home boiling water, have a passenger to shuck and de-silk, and give it a few mins in the boiling water the minute you get it home. You’ll hate most other corn on the cob for the rest of your life, but you’ll know the purest food joy on earth. Honestly, to the unknown people who took hand engineered maize into sweet corn, huzzah!!! We salute you!