By Calum Henderson
Watching the new Netflix documentary series Street Food, there are moments where I'm filled with such an intense longing I could scream. I'm Ryan Gosling in The Notebook, gazing at a photo of Rachel McAdams; I'm Liz Lemon in 30 Rock, involuntarily mouthing "I want to go to there".
"There" changes with each episode, from Bangkok to Osaka to Delhi (also Yogyakarta, Chiayi, Seoul, Ho Chi Minh City, Singapore, Cebu). Wherever the camera is pointed is where I want to be more than anywhere in the world. Preferably eating myself sick.
This might be the most hungus I've ever felt watching a food show. And with previous Netflix binges like Ugly Delicious and Salt Fat Acid Heat under my belt, this is saying something.
It makes sense when you learn Street Food is made by the same people who do Chef's Table, another poetic and mouthwateringly shot Netflix series which focuses on the life journeys and philosophies of renowned (and often sensationally pretentious) chefs.