From street vendor to ‘Top Food Creator’: Pakistani BaBa Jee’s journey to online stardom

This screengrab from one of Rizwan Chaudhary's youtube cooking tutorials shows him explaining a recipie to his audience from his kitchen in Narowal, Pakistan on February 1, 2023. (Photo courtesy: @BaBaFoodRRC/Youtube)
Short Url
Updated 03 February 2023
Follow

From street vendor to ‘Top Food Creator’: Pakistani BaBa Jee’s journey to online stardom

  • Rizwan Chaudhary sold samosas and burgers at roadside stall before son convinced him to shoot a cooking video
  • The poor family of five now runs the widely popular BaBa Jee RRC YouTube channel, owns their own home in Narowal

KARACHI: It all began on a summer afternoon in 2019 when Ramish Rizwan Chaudhary, the 18-year-old son of a roadside samosa vendor, shot a cooking video of his father Rizwan Chaudhary on his cell phone and posted it on YouTube.

The recipe for restaurant-style Kofta curry amassed 260,000 views instantly. There was no kitchen, no studio — just an easy-to-make and well-explained recipe taught in Chaudhary’s unique style of delivery.

Four years later, the family’s BaBa Food RRC page has 3.78 million subscribers on YouTube and in a ceremony in December last year, it won the award for Pakistan’s ‘Top Food Creator’ from the video-sharing giant TikTok.

Based on the earnings from his social media fame, Chaudhary and his family of five that once lived in a small rented house in Multan now own their residence in the city of Narowal, complete with a recording studio and sophisticated editing equipment. Their kitchen alone is worth Rs500,000, and since 2019, the family says it has been able to donate up to Rs25 million to poor families to help them set up their own food businesses.

“This journey started in 2019 from a small kiosk from where we produced the first video for the BaBa Food RRC YouTube channel,” Ramish told Arab News, saying his father used to sell savory snacks and burgers at the roadside stall at the time.

“The first hurdle was that there was no money to buy a camera, no money to purchase lights, no money to buy mics, and beyond that, the biggest hurdle was that there was no money to create the recipes,” Ramish, who produces all the content for the family’s page with is brother Ali, said.




Ramish Rizwan is seen recording a video of his father explaining a recipe for his YouTube channel from his kitchen in Narowal, Pakistan on February 2, 2023. (AN Photo)

“My family and I have witnessed poverty and unemployment very closely.”

But Chaudhary had no complaints about his difficult path to fame and wealth.

“Sometimes, Allah passes a person from the worst conditions to eventually bless him with the best,” the food creator told Arab News, giving credit for his success to his children and wife.

“Usually parents teach their children, but this didn’t happen in our case,” he said. “I taught my children and my children taught me [back] and that’s how we have taken this system ahead.”

Chaudhry’s wife Shahida added:

“Behind these two, rather three [successful] men, there is the hand of a woman and a mother ... I have worked hard with my husband and my children, I have worked hard day and night and the recipes I have given them, every recipe of mine has gone into millions [of social media views].”




Rizwan Chaudhary (right) and his son Ramish Rizwan pose with their YouTube top creator gold and silver shields in Narowal Pakistan. (Photo courtesy: BaBa Food RRC/Facebook)

“THERE’S NOTHING TO IT

The key to the family’s success, Ramish said, was his father’s unique style, his diction, and the way he engaged with followers and responded to comments, teaching easy-to-make recipes that other beginner cooks, especially women, could try at home.

Another factor owing to his popularity was that Chaudhary frequently shared recipes for commercial food — everything from Russian salad to KFC-style nuggets to pulao that tastes like that from the Savour franchise. Even his recipe for a homemade oil that allegedly turns gray hair black has over seven million views, his most popular video by far. His fifth most popular video is about how to make an anti-wrinkle cream at home, and his pages are filled with herbal remedies for everything, including colds, coughs and joint pains.

Chaudhary’s fans also agreed that his appeal was in the practical demonstration of his refrain ‘there’s nothing to it,’ making any recipe easy to execute.

Mahnoor Maqsood, a resident of Peshawar who has been following Chaudhary’s channel for two years, described the chef’s attraction thus:

“He has a very sweet way of explaining his recipes, like one of your own parents is explaining them.”

Chaudhary’s tips and tricks for everything from peeling vegetables, or hard boiled eggs, more quickly and easily, have also won him a loyal following.

“He once said that if you put oil in boiled macaroni after you strain out the water, they won’t stick to each other after they’re cooked,” Maqsood told Arab News. 

Macaroni, where each narrow curved tube sits separately, is the dish that Maqsood said she now cooks most often.

But the seemingly easy videos take hours, even days, of painstaking work in recipe creation and production.

Ramish, who learnt to create and produce videos with the help of online guides, said even seven-minute-long clips could take days of hectic work to complete.

“The recipe is first written down, it is then tried and discussed,” Ramish said. “The background of recipes is discussed: when was it invented, when did it start, how was it made then, and how is it made now?”

“Mostly it happens that we have to make the video of a recipe ten times,” he said, smiling, “since it did not turn out the way we want to show it.”


China, Pakistan unveil sculptures of founding fathers, highlighting strategic ties

Updated 12 min 44 sec ago
Follow

China, Pakistan unveil sculptures of founding fathers, highlighting strategic ties

  • The statues unveiled in Pakistan’s federal capital have been created by a veteran Chinese sculptor
  • PM Sharif says the event showed the depth of Pakistan-China ties based on trust and cooperation

ISLAMABAD: A Chinese delegation visiting Pakistan on Thursday unveiled sculptures of the founding fathers of both nations, Chairman Mao Zedong of China and Quaid-e-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah of Pakistan, in a ceremony, with Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif hailing the event as a testament to the historic bonds between the two nations.

The event honored the pivotal roles of Mao and Jinnah in shaping the destinies of their respective nations. Mao led China through a transformative revolution, laying the foundation for its rise as a global power, while Jinnah, revered as

Pakistan’s father of the nation, spearheaded the movement for the creation of an independent homeland for Muslims in South Asia.

Last year, Pakistan’s diplomatic mission in Beijing unveiled similar statues of the two leaders during a ceremony attended by high-ranking Chinese officials and dignitaries.

The sculptures unveiled in Pakistan’s federal capital today were created by veteran Chinese artist Yuan Xikun, who expressed his pride in contributing to this historic project.

“It’s a great honor for me to be here at the Prime Minister’s Office for the unveiling ceremony of the sculptures of Pakistan’s father of the nation Quaid-e-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah and the brave leader of China, Chairman Mao Zedong, which I had been invited to create,” Yuan said.

“It’s the best commemoration of the 148th anniversary of the birth of Jinnah and the 131st anniversary of the birth of Mao Zedong,” he added.

Pakistan marked Jinnah’s birth anniversary, which falls on December 25, just a day ago, while China is commemorating Mao’s birthday today, December 26.

The Chinese sculptor said the inauguration of the statues reaffirmed the common admiration and respect that the two nations have for their leaders.

He also maintained the ceremony symbolized the brotherhood between the two countries.

Prime Minister Sharif, who was present at the gathering, underscored the depth of Pakistan-China relations, describing them as a model of mutual respect, trust and cooperation.

“The historic bonds between Pakistan and China forged over decades are a testament to our shared values, mutual respect, trust, and cooperation,” he said.

Highlighting the multifaceted collaboration between the two nations, Sharif praised initiatives like the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), cultural exchanges and educational programs.

“Hundreds of young Pakistani students visiting Chinese universities and learning Mandarin are building a bridge between Beijing and Islamabad,” he added, adding the first batch of Pakistani agriculture graduates would visit China early next year to gain expertise in modern farming techniques.


Pakistan’s Dewan Farooque Motors to launch Chinese electric trucks in 2025

Updated 26 December 2024
Follow

Pakistan’s Dewan Farooque Motors to launch Chinese electric trucks in 2025

  • Completely Built Units of the ‘Kama’ have already arrived in Pakistan for local assembly
  • New Chinese electric truck leverages robust structure of diesel-powered Shehzore model

KARACHI: Dewan Farooque Motors Limited, a Pakistani automobile importer and manufacturer based in Karachi, will assemble Chinese electric trucks locally, with the vehicle’s launch scheduled for the first quarter of next year, a project director at the company said. 

Pakistan approved an ambitious National Electric Vehicles Policy (NEVP) in 2019 with the goal that electric vehicles would comprise 30 percent of all passenger vehicles and heavy-duty truck sales by 2030. It has set an even more ambitious target of electric vehicles comprising 90 percent of all vehicle sales by 2040.

“The ‘Kama,’ our new Chinese electric truck, leverages the robust structure of our diesel-powered Shehzore model. For Test trial, CBU (completely built) units have already arrived in Pakistan for further proceeding to local assembly, with a launch planned within first quarter of 2025,” Kashif Riaz, Director Projects at Dewan Farooque Motors, told Arab News. 

“Traditionally, commercial trucks have a voracious appetite for fuel. Electrifying them dramatically reduces operating costs. This light commercial vehicle has a 300 Kilometer e-range and supports rapid charging.”

Riaz said the widespread adoption of electric vehicles in Pakistan could bring international acclaim and even secure carbon credits from the World Bank, presenting a “golden opportunity” as Pakistan possessed the necessary capacity, skilled workforce, and infrastructure for domestic manufacturing. 

“With abundant lithium resources and the potential for in-country battery production, 100 percent localized electric vehicle manufacturing is within reach,” the project direxctor added. 

“By eliminating the need for traditional engines and transmissions, and by localizing production of key components like batteries, Pakistan can position itself as a global exporter of electric vehicles. Stronger support for domestic EV manufacturing will undoubtedly accelerate production.”

NEW EV POLICY

Hybrid electric vehicle sales in Pakistan have more than doubled in the past year. BYD Pakistan, a partnership between China’s BYD and Pakistani car group Mega Motors, said in September up to 50 percent of all vehicles bought in Pakistan by 2030 will be electrified in some form in line with global targets.

The Warren Buffett-backed Chinese electric vehicle giant BYD announced its entry into Pakistan in August, making the nation of 250 million people one of its newest markets.

Local media reported in August that standards for EV charging stations had been drafted by the power ministry, with the government considering offering them affordable electricity.

Under the new EV policy, the government has introduced subsidies of Rs50,000 for electric motorcycles and Rs200,000 for three-wheelers like rickshaws, with a total allocation of Rs4 billion. These subsidies will be distributed through auctions. So far, two companies have been granted licenses, and 31 more applications are under review.

The policy also incorporates a reduction in the policy rate from 22 to 15 percent, with financing available at a three percent Kibor (Karachi Interbank Offered Rate) and the government covering the financial cost. Consumers will pay monthly installments of around Rs9,000 over two years, an amount lower than their projected fuel savings.

A Credit Loss Guarantee managed by the Finance Division will ensure no financial burden on the Ministry of Industries or consumers.

Additional initiatives include offering free electric bikes or scooters to 120 high-achieving students and reducing duties on EV components to encourage local manufacturing. The government is also set to establish a New Energy Fund and a New Energy Vehicle Center to support these measures.

BYD Pakistan is also collaborating with two oil marketing companies to establish a charging infrastructure network and aims to establish 20 to 30 charging stations within the initial phases concurrent with the rollout of its cars.

BYD Pakistan will initially sell fully assembled vehicles, which are subject to higher import charges than vehicles shipped in parts and assembled locally. Dewan Motors is also set to launch its EVs under the completely knocked down (CKD) license.


Pakistan says 2024 dominated by ‘robust exchanges’ with Gulf nations

Updated 26 December 2024
Follow

Pakistan says 2024 dominated by ‘robust exchanges’ with Gulf nations

  • Pakistan has been pushing for foreign investment to shore up its $350 billion economy
  • Saudi Arabia, UAE, Qatar remained key focus of Pakistan’s bilateral engagements in 2024

ISLAMABAD: Foreign Office Spokesperson Mumtaz Zahra Baloch on Thursday outlined Pakistan’s key bilateral engagements for 2024 during a year-end briefing, saying 2024 was dominated by “robust” engagements with Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) nations. 

Pakistan has been pushing for foreign investment in a bid to shore up its $350 billion economy as it navigates a challenging recovery path and has been buttressed by a $7 billion facility from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in September. It has particularly looked to strengthen ties with allies and friendly nations, particularly the UAE, which said it would invest $10 billion in promising economic sectors, and Saudi Arbia, which has promised a $5 billion investment package that cash-strapped Islamabad desperately needs to shore up foreign reserves and fight a chronic balance of payment crisis.

“There was a robust exchange of high-level engagements between Pakistan and the GCC countries,” Baloch said in her last briefing of the year 2024, adding that Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif undertook four official visits to Saudi Arabia which had consolidated the two nations’ “strategic and economic partnership.”

“Important understandings were reached with the kingdom of Saudi Arabia in political security and economic domains, and to translate the commitment between Pakistan and his Royal Highness Prince Mohammad bin Salman to expedite investment package worth $5 billion,” the spokeswoman said. 

Pakistani and Saudi businesses signed 34 MoUs worth $2.8 billion in October. The prime minister’s office said this month seven of the 34 MoUs had been actualized into agreements worth $560 million.

The foreign office spokeswoman said trade and investment opportunities also remained a key focus of Pakistan’s bilateral engagements with Kuwait, Qatar and the UAE in 2024.

“Cooperation will be prioritized with these countries in energy, mining and aviation sectors,” she told reporters.

In May this year, Sharif said UAE’s Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan had “made a commitment of investing $10 billion in multiple sectors.”

Last month, the government’s spokesperson Attaullah Tarar said Qatar would invest $3 billion in diverse Pakistani sectors. In June, Pakistan also signed a loan agreement with Kuwait for $25 million for Mohmand Dam, with assurances of support from the Kuwait Fund that it would engage its Arab Coordination Group to finance Diamer Bhasha Dam. 

Pakistan and Kuwait also signed agreements on industrial cooperation and engineering in May. 


Pakistan discovers gas reserves in northwest with potential to produce 2.14 million cubic feet daily

Updated 42 min 54 sec ago
Follow

Pakistan discovers gas reserves in northwest with potential to produce 2.14 million cubic feet daily

  • Discovery is expected to enhance the South Asian nation’s energy self-sufficiency, says state media
  • Pakistan had recently reported decline in gas reserves, raising concerns about higher energy imports

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Oil and Gas Development Company Limited (OGDCL) has discovered gas reserves in the northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province with the capacity to produce 2.14 million cubic feet of gas per day (MCFD), the state broadcaster reported on Thursday.

Pakistan heavily relies on oil and gas imports and has faced gas outages in recent years due to a decline in domestic gas supplies and failed attempts to purchase expensive gas from the international spot market.

Last year in June, the Energy Planning Resource Center, which operates under the planning ministry, reported a sharp decline in gas reserves, raising concerns about future gas production and supply in Pakistan. The center projected that natural gas production might shrink to 2,306 MCFD by 2030.

“Under the natural resources exploration projects of the Special Investment Facilitation Council, the OGDCL has discovered significant gas reserves in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa,” Radio Pakistan said. “The discovered reserves are capable of producing up to 2.14 million cubic feet of gas per day.”

It added the discovery would enhance Pakistan’s energy self-sufficiency and pave the way for further exploration in the mining sector.

In October, the China Central Depository and Clearing Company signed a deal with the OGDCL to develop Pakistan’s tight gas potential. Tight gas, a type of unconventional gas requiring advanced extraction methods, is found in reservoir rocks with low permeability, most often sandstone.

In February, the OGDCL announced the discovery of a new natural gas reserve in the Khairpur district of southern Sindh province.

In October last year, Mari Petroleum Company Limited, an Islamabad-based petroleum exploration and lease company, unveiled a substantial gas discovery in Pakistan’s southern Ghotki-Sindh region, with initial estimates indicating a daily yield of 1.11 MCFD.

In September 2022, the OGDCL also discovered gas deposits in the Kohat district of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province.

Founded in 1961, the OGDCL explores, drills, refines and sells oil and gas in Pakistan. The company has gained importance as the country seeks to boost domestic supplies and attract foreign investment.


Pakistan reach 88-4 in Test opener against South Africa

Updated 17 min 50 sec ago
Follow

Pakistan reach 88-4 in Test opener against South Africa

  • Kamran Ghulam, Mohammad Rizwan remain unbeaten on 23, 10 respectively
  • Pakistan skipper Babar Azam’s red-ball struggles continue as he scores only 4

CENTURION: Fast bowler Corbin Bosch made a dream test debut with a wicket on his first ball to provide South Africa a perfect start in the Boxing Day test against Pakistan on Thursday.
Bosch lured Pakistan captain Shan Masood (17) to play a lose drive and had him caught in the slips as Pakistan reached 88-4 at lunch on a seamer friendly SuperSport Park pitch, losing four wickets for 20 runs.
Bosch became the fifth South African bowler after Bert Vogler, Dane Piedt, Hardu Viljoen and Tshepo Moreki to claim a wicket with his first ball in test cricket.
Kamran Ghulam was unbeaten on 23, including a top-edged six over the wicketkeeper’s head against Bosch, and Mohammad Rizwan was not out on 10 at the break.
Masood and opening partner Saim Ayub (14) had thwarted the pace threat of Kagiso Rabada and Marco Jansen in the first hour after captain Temba Bavuma won the toss under overcast conditions and elected to field.
But Bosch’s breakthrough saw Pakistan’s top-order crumble against the pace with Dane Paterson finding edges of Ayub and Babar Azam (4).
Babar, who was dropped for the last two test matches at home against England, has long been struggling in red-ball cricket. His struggles continued as he hit Bosch for a boundary of the first ball he faced before playing loosely to Paterson and getting caught in the slips after just 11 balls.
Left-hander Saud Shakeel (14) struck three fours against Paterson before Bosch had him caught down the leg-side off a sharp short pitch ball after South Africa successfully went for a television review.
Both teams packed their playing XIs with four fast bowlers each and didn’t include a specialist spinner at a venue where pace has dominated over the last six years.
South Africa, which leads the World Test Championship points table, needs a win in one of the two test matches against Pakistan to guarantee a place in next June’s final at Lord’s.
Seventh-place Pakistan included fast bowlers Naseem Shah, Khurram Shahzad, Mohammad Abbas and Aamer Jamal in its team.
Abbas made a comeback to test cricket after more than three years while Naseem returned after missing out the last two home tests against England in October.
Injury-prone Shahzad also missed out three home test matches against England, but got the nod ahead of left-arm pace bowler Mir Hamza.