Showing posts with label @TopChef. Show all posts
Showing posts with label @TopChef. Show all posts

Saturday, November 24, 2018

'Top Chef' Dale Talde muses on an 'authentic' Filipino American Thanksgiving


SO YOU'VE survived Thanksgiving, the launching of the holiday season; the first of those family get-togethers.

For all the holidays -- but especially Thanksgiving -- the celebration centers around food and that all-American bird -- the turkey. 

If you are descended from immigrants (and aren't we all?) then the fusion of cultures and food traditions make Thanksgiving a perfect time to celebrate all our heritages -- traditional American fare spiced up with a dish or two from the country your family came from.

If we serve lumpia and pancit with that turkey, does that make our Thanksgiving less "American?" or less "authentic?"

Popular Top Chef Dale Talde, Food & Wine's Best New Chef in 2013, bristles at the word "authentic." Who's to say what's "authentic?" he asks.

“For my parents, it’s a learned holiday. For years the turkey was horrible in our house. Now we do it right, but everything else is Filipino food,” Talde told People.

It wasn't always this way. Growing up in Chicago where he was born, as he went to school, he resented the cuisine of his parents. He just wanted to eat McDonalds and fries, chicken nuggets and Hot Pockets like his classmates.

As he got older, he formed an alliance of commiserators, friends of a variety of ethnicities united by their second-generation Asian immigrant experience. Their homes all smelled different for different reasons—Dale's from shrimp paste, Robert's from kimchi, and Raj's from asafoetida. With their families, they were foreigners. 

Talde and his friends were all-American. Like their peers they listened to American music (hip-hop, mostly), wore the latest Jordans and sported jerseys of their favorite sports heroes, played basketball, and ate American food, which for Dale meant burgers and tacos, kielbasa and hot dogs, egg rolls and deep-dish pizza—anything that wasn't Filipino.

As an adult, he's learned to appreciate his roots and the Filipino dishes his mom made in her Chicago kitchen. He parlayed his training and his heritage into two appearances on the Food Network's Top Chef, including the series featuring Top Chef all-stars, and a string of restaurants reflecting his own vision of America.

Today, his dual identity is etched on the menu at his restaurants in New York and New Jersey. There he reimagines iconic Asian dishes, imbuing them with Americana while doubling down on the culinary fireworks that made them so popular in the first place. 




In his restaurants you're likely to see menu items like pretzel dumplings, breakfast ramen, and his insanely delicious (if unholy) take on pad thai, made with fatty bacon and deep-fried oysters. A few blocks up the road at his after-work bar Pork Slope, he’s serving tater tots, cheeseburgers, and a pork chop banh mi. 

Some chefs cook food meant to transport you to some foreign land. Talde's food is meant to remind you that you're home.

Talde's various restaurants offers up dishes that is a mishmash of cuisines from around the world: Korean, Japanese, Singaporean, Filipino, German, French, Italian, even Jewish.

That's about as authentically American as you can get, right? 
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Thursday, October 11, 2018

Popular 'Top Chef' contestant writes she has a year to live.


SCREEN CAPTURE
Fatima Ali on 'Top Chef'

POPULAR Top Chef contestant Fatima Ali said Tuesday (Oct. 9) is trying to live a lifetime in the year left to her.

The 29-year old Pakistani American chef's cancer cells “are back with a vengeance.”

Ali, voted fan favorite on Season 15 of the Bravo cooking reality show that finished airing in March, wrote her dire diagnosis for Bon Appetit.

“My oncologist has told me that I have a year to live, with or without the new chemotherapy regimen,” she wrote. “I was looking forward to being 30, flirty and thriving. Guess I have to step it up on the flirting. I have no time to lose.”

INSTAGRAM / PADMA LAKSHIMI
'Top Chef' host Padma Lakshimi, left, visits Fatima Ali.
“I am desperate to overload my senses in the coming months, making reservations at the world’s best restaurants, reaching out to past lovers and friends, and smothering my family, giving them the time that I so selfishly guarded before,” she added.

According to her Top Chef bio, Ali immigrated to the U.S. from Pakistan at age 18, attended the Culinary Institute of America and made a name for herself in the competitive New York City restaurant scene.

Ali was diagnosed with Ewing’s sarcoma in late 2017. After undergoing chemotherapy and surgery she was declared cancer-free. However, she wrote, "The cancer cells my doctors believed had vanished are back with a vengeance in my left hip and femur bone."

A day after Ali announced her diagnosis, her friends and fellow chefs launched a GoFundMe campaign to support her dream of eating her way around the world.

One of the members of Team Fati, as they’re calling themselves, is chef Adrienne Cheatham, who competed against Ali in the same season of Top Chef. In an Instagram post, Cheatham wrote that the group created the campaign in an effort to help Ali experience her “dream to live to the fullest” in the time she has left.

"I was always deathly afraid of being average in any way, and now I desperately wish to have a simple, uneventful life," Ali concluded in her poignant essay.
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