Daughter and VERY young mum leave thousands in awe after swapping clothes and looking nearly identical
- Home cook Vivian Aronson wowed thousands with her youthful look
- The 44-year-old is known for sharing cooking videos on social media
- In a video, she swapped outfits with her daughter Wendy Li, 22
- The two look so alike it’s hard to tell which is which
By Carina Stathis for Daily Mail Australia
Published: | Updated:
A mom known for sharing cooking videos on YouTube has wowed thousands with her youthful complexion.
Vivian Aronson, 44, of Orlando, swapped outfits with her daughter Wendy Li, 22, for a video on Instagram, and left most doubts about who was who.
In the clip, the home chef wore her daughter’s plaid skirt, blue top and heels as if she was about to go out, while Wendy wore her mother’s casual outfit complete with slippers and an apron.
‘My daughter dressed me up as HER!’ Vivian captioned the video.
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Vivian Aronson, 44, of Orlando, swapped outfits with her daughter Wendy Li, 22, for a trending video posted on Instagram, and left most doubts about who’s who. Vivian (right) and Wendy (left) appear similar in height and hair color, making it hard to tell them apart
The two resemble each other in height and hair color, making it difficult to tell them apart.
After a week, the video has been viewed 1.1 million times, receiving over 57,000 likes and hundreds wanting to know how it maintains its youthfulness.
“Honestly, you can’t tell who’s who!” one person commented, another added, “I had to do a double take omg they look the same.”
A third said: ‘Whatever you eat or drink daily, I need it. You literally look like you’re 20 again.
“Not me to review every time and still be amazed,” said another.
Others said that Vivian “doesn’t look over 30” and that Wendy will come with “good genetics.”

Vivian (left) posted a video to her social media accounts under the handle @cookingbomb and is best known for sharing cooking videos
Vivian moved to the United States from China in 2005 and her passion for cooking began “at an early age”.
Growing up with her grandparents, she said in her YouTube bio: “I started helping my grandma cook since I was 8, we were using honeycomb charcoal at that time in China.”
“There weren’t many restaurants to go out to back then, we always cook and eat at home.”
Today, Vivian has over 2 million subscribers on YouTube, 347,000 followers on Instagram and 2.7 million followers on TikTok, all under the handle @cookingbomb.
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