kaigou: Internet! says the excited scribble (2 Internet!)
[personal profile] kaigou
A year (or two?) ago, there was a conversation online about the experience of growing up as an immigrant, with Mom's homefood for lunch and the reactions of (native-born, white) Americans to seeing the unfamiliar food. I cannot recall where that conversation occurred (community? someone's journal?) but if you do, pass along this link.

Is it Fair for Chefs to Cook Other Cultures’ Foods?, Francis Lam and Eddie Huang. Two immigrant sons hash out what it’s like to have your food shunned and celebrated in America

Some interesting, err, food for thought, in terms of how that childhood experience bears on the adult experience of two non-white American chefs/foodies and the question of -- when a non-American cuisine becomes 'popular' -- who has the right to cook it.

Date: 6 Jan 2013 11:29 pm (UTC)
From: [personal profile] dsgood
There's a food truck in Minneapolis which sells pasties: brought to the Upper Midwest by Cornish miners, adopted by other miners, now a regional food and a Finnish-American food.

Among the pasties offered: Thai vegetable.

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kaigou: this is what I do, darling (Default)
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