chef tatung : mainstreaming local and regional cuisine

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Mainstreaming Local and Regional Cuisine A presentation by: Chef Tatung

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Page 1: Chef Tatung : Mainstreaming Local and Regional Cuisine

Mainstreaming Local and Regional CuisineA presentation by: Chef Tatung

Page 2: Chef Tatung : Mainstreaming Local and Regional Cuisine

Pagkaing Pinoy• How would you describe it?

• How is Filipino food stereotyped in the mainstream/ international markets?

• But, what is it really?

Page 3: Chef Tatung : Mainstreaming Local and Regional Cuisine
Page 4: Chef Tatung : Mainstreaming Local and Regional Cuisine

The Journey of our Palates:Linguistically and Gastronomically

Page 5: Chef Tatung : Mainstreaming Local and Regional Cuisine

Our Austronesian roots• The name Austronesia comes from the Latin austrālis “southern”

plus the Greek νήσος (nesos) “island”. However, in contemporary terminology, the word Austronesia pertains to the regions where Austronesian languages are spoken.

• Austronesia then covers almost half of the globe, although mostly ocean and oceanic islands, starting from Madagascar to the west until Easter Island, to the east.

• Austronesia as a region has three traditional divisions: Taiwan (Formosa), the Maritime Southeast Asia, and Austronesian Oceania (Micronesia, Melanesia, and Polynesia)

• We share a mother tongue and a common taste for coconut, yam, sour food, sea food, fermented food and pork.

Page 6: Chef Tatung : Mainstreaming Local and Regional Cuisine

Food we share

Page 7: Chef Tatung : Mainstreaming Local and Regional Cuisine
Page 8: Chef Tatung : Mainstreaming Local and Regional Cuisine

“Kinilaw” in Visayas “Kilawen” in Luzon, “keleguen” in Guam and the Marianas:

Raw fish with souring agent

• Raw seafoods can also be savored in Fiji, Tahiti, Samoa, Hawaii – though not necessarily with a souring agent

It is highly probable that Kinilaw inspired Ceviche because citrus fruits were originally not endemic to the Americas.

Page 9: Chef Tatung : Mainstreaming Local and Regional Cuisine
Page 10: Chef Tatung : Mainstreaming Local and Regional Cuisine

•  982 AD - At the time, merchants from "Ma-i" (now in Mindoro) brought their wares to Guangzhou.

• 10th – 11th century CE, Kingdom of Butuan was doing trade with the Kingdom of Champa and the Srivijaya Empire

• 1405 – Sulatanate of Sulu was one of the powerful maritime fleet in Asia

Page 11: Chef Tatung : Mainstreaming Local and Regional Cuisine
Page 12: Chef Tatung : Mainstreaming Local and Regional Cuisine

• Basic cooking methods• Boiling• Grilling and roasting• Eating food raw• Steaming• Ingredients used

– Coconut– Taro– Fish– Pork– Citrus Fruits

Page 13: Chef Tatung : Mainstreaming Local and Regional Cuisine

• Spanish Invation 1591-21– Galleon Trade

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• Manila in the 18th century: “Like Jerusalem during the first Pentecost” wrote Pedro Murillo Velarde SJ. “Languages from all over the world can be heard in its streets”.

• Today: Filipinos stand out in Asia for having family names that are: Indigenous Filipino, Spanish, Chinese, Japanese, German, French, Danish, Italian, British, Greek, Arabic.

Page 15: Chef Tatung : Mainstreaming Local and Regional Cuisine

• Introduction of new cooking methods– Stewing/ braising– Baking– Gisa

• Introduction of new ingredients– Corn– Potatoes– Tomatoes– Beef (Meat & Dairy)– Wheat

Page 16: Chef Tatung : Mainstreaming Local and Regional Cuisine
Page 17: Chef Tatung : Mainstreaming Local and Regional Cuisine

Our tongues have been transformed not only by the food we ate but by the

languages we spoke.

A quick quide on how foods are namedA dish was named via

– Main Ingredient• Bulalo (Beef bones)

– Cooking method• Nilaga (Boiled)

– What it was cooked in• Puchero (Stew pot) literally cooked in a pot

Page 18: Chef Tatung : Mainstreaming Local and Regional Cuisine
Page 19: Chef Tatung : Mainstreaming Local and Regional Cuisine

• Our schools do not emphasize heritage• A strange obsession with “pure” culture• Poor international image of the Philippines

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•People resort to an easy and popular reference with the Balut

•Majority of Local Chefs don’t recognize Indegenous cooking as a cornerstone of Filipino cuisine

•We apologize when serving simple honest to goodness Filipino fare.

Page 21: Chef Tatung : Mainstreaming Local and Regional Cuisine

Many Filipinos focus on ‘Pinoy Pride’. Thinking Pinoy is distinct and pure and is above other cultures.

#yabang pinoy

We sometimes have an over-obsession with pure culture.

Page 22: Chef Tatung : Mainstreaming Local and Regional Cuisine
Page 23: Chef Tatung : Mainstreaming Local and Regional Cuisine
Page 24: Chef Tatung : Mainstreaming Local and Regional Cuisine

Henri II married Catherine de Medici, an Italian. As Queen (1547-1559) showed the importance of eating on separate plates, glass cups, and pastries.

Page 25: Chef Tatung : Mainstreaming Local and Regional Cuisine

Only since the 1800s when Alexander Kurakin, Russian ambassador to France, popularized table service à la russe where each course is served sequentially, instead of simultaneously.

Page 26: Chef Tatung : Mainstreaming Local and Regional Cuisine

Bifteck from Beefsteak Choucroute from Sauerkraut Mayonnaise from the Catalan

aioli (brought in by Marchal Mahon in the 18th century)

Couscous

• But such is French originality that all of these were indigenized and re-invented with a new style!

Page 27: Chef Tatung : Mainstreaming Local and Regional Cuisine
Page 28: Chef Tatung : Mainstreaming Local and Regional Cuisine

How do we mainstream

• Make it easy for people to understand what it is.

• Tell a story-make it relevant• Make it available always• Keep pushing

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