8 Recipes to Celebrate Asian American Food - Viet World Kitchen (2024)

8 Recipes to Celebrate Asian American Food - Viet World Kitchen (1)

Years ago someone from Vietnam emailed me with kind words about my cookbooks, but the person also wrote that I cooked a lot of ‘old’ food. I took that as a compliment as well as a nudge. The person was looking for new ideas, not just classics and traditions. However, in producing recipes for mostly non-Vietnamese cooks, I know that people want the familiar comforts. If I stray too far, I may be labeled as being “Americanized”.

There’s nothing wrong with becoming or being Americanized. However, when it comes to food, the term is used to say that something is bad tasting with a certain level of finger pointing, as if the cook had sold out and abandoned authenticity and tradition.

What it Means to Be Americanized

Accusations of cultural wrongdoing keep us from cooking well because they keep us from understanding the human experience. I’ve written about my own dealings with imposter syndrome. But lately I’ve been thinking about what it means to be Americanized. I am American. I’m Vietnamese American. In Vietnamese, we describe Vietnamese American-ess as Mỹ Việt (American Vietnamese). The terms are flipped, which is to say that there’s Americanization happening. It’s okay. In fact, to negatively frame something as being “Americanized’ invalidates the experiences of people like me – who are Asian American. When I am in Vietnam, I’m not perceived as Vietnamese. I’ve been shaped and fed (literally and figuratively) by my life in the United States. That is true, honest, and authentic.

8 Recipes to Celebrate Asian American Food - Viet World Kitchen (2)

Lots has been pejoratively said about fortune cookies as a Japanese idea introduced to San Francisco in the late 1800s. General Tso’s chicken is unfamiliar to mainland Chinese eaters but a favorite in the States. It’s easy to laugh at and dismiss those popular foods but they have a level of authenticity and tradition of their own that’s built upon the experiences of the people that they’ve impacted.

Asian culture is not exotic but rather part of what makes the United States what it is. Negative Yelp reviews often default to saying that an Asian restaurant offers bland or meh “Americanized” food. Maybe the restaurant owners and staff like it that way or the cooks had a bad day. Or, the diner just did not enjoy the experience.

Americanized Asian foods can comfort and satisfy while telling the story of their makers and community. To spotlight the Asian American and Pacific Islander experience, here are a number of recipes for you to cook up.

Egg Foo Young

I’ve never ordered egg foo young at a restaurant because I grew up on frilly egg pancakes at home. I did not know it was a Chinese American dish. James Beard included it in his book, American Cookery, published in the 1970s. Beard grew up on food cooked by a temperamental Chinese cook named Let, who was employed by Beard's mother. Beard’s comments about egg foo young are pretty interesting reflections on what Asian food was like fifty years ago. I made Beard’s egg foo young recipe and it was delicious. You may also put egg foo young in bread for a St. Paul Sandwich.

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Anyone questioning the legitimacy of sauce atop frilly egg pancakes should check out the tahu telur recipe for very tasty fried tofu and egg pancakes served with peanut sauce. As you can see below, the Indonesian egg pancakes look similar to Chinese egg foo young.

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Orange Chicken

There’s nothing to laugh at about orange chicken. People love it. Panda Express executive chef Andy Kao, who was French trained, created the dish in 1987. In 2017 alone, Panda Express served up 80 million pounds of the deep fried chicken nuggets coated in tangy spicy sauce. The Chinese-American favorite has crossed cultural lines. I even made Snoop Dogg’s tasty orange chicken recipe (pictured at the top), which is a delicious reflection of how popular and mainstream orange chicken is.

If you’d rather fix an Asian American fried chicken recipe produced by folks of Asian heritage, make the crunchy spicy salty soy sauce fried chicken from Eric Kim’s Korean American cookbook.Here's an idea: Fry up Eric's chicken and coat it with Snoop Dogg's sauce!

Crab Rangoon

Two favorites – crab and cream cheese, tucked into a crispy fried wonton skin. Few can walk away from a plate of crab Rangoon. It's a Tiki bar classic from Trader Vic’s that has, over the years, spread in popularity all over. Chinese-American restaurants often include it on menus. Interestingly, Vietnamese restaurants in the Minneapolis-St. Paul area serve “cheese wontons” along with goi cuon rice paper rolls, classic banh mi, and sticky rice dumplings wrapped in banana leaf.

There are many iterations and you can’t go wrong. I’ve included many crab Rangoon recipes on this website because whenever I make them, I fall in love with them all over again. For example, there’s my updated version of the original crab Rangoon recipe by Vic Begeron.

I also devised a take for Viet-ish cream-cheese filled hoanh thanh chien. And, you could skip the frying and opt for baking up deviled sriracha crab Rangoon wonton cups (pictured above).

Chicken Lettuce Cups

When my mother first tried chicken lettuce cups at a Chinese restaurant in Southern California, she didn’t understand them. They were described as Chinese tacos. Mom didn’t get it but I assured her that the appetizer was popularized by Cecilia Chiang, a Shanghai-born successful restaurateur in San Francisco. Credited with introducing regional Chinese food to the United States, Chiang passed away a few years ago but her squab and chicken lettuce cup legacy endures all over the country. Her son is part of the PF Chang’s empire. Of course, chicken lettuce cups are on the restaurant menu (there’s a “family secret” in the preparation). Hand chopping boneless chicken is laborious so I backed off the animal protein in my chicken, tofu and shiitake lettuce cup recipe.

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If we turn up our noses or turn away from “Americanized” Asian food, we wouldn’t allow Viet-Cajun seafood boils or California rolls into our lives. That would be sad. Food does not have to have generations of history to offer up the authentic human experience of its maker. Food just has to taste good, true and filled with intention.

What are your favorite Asian American dishes?

8 Recipes to Celebrate Asian American Food - Viet World Kitchen (2024)

FAQs

How to celebrate Asian American Pacific Islander Month food? ›

10 Recipes to Celebrate AAPI Month
  1. Chicken with Peanut-Coconut Curry. ...
  2. Steamed Bao Buns. ...
  3. Sticky Miso-Glazed Tofu. ...
  4. Instant Pot Adobo Chicken. ...
  5. Easy Orange Chicken and Fried Rice. ...
  6. Coconut-Orange Salmon Poke Bowls. ...
  7. Ramen Bowls. ...
  8. Instant Pot Banh Mi Pork Sandwiches.

What is Asian American culture? ›

The term "Asian American" refers to those people with familial roots originating in many countries, ethnic groups, and cultures of the Asian continent including, but not limited to: Asian Indian, Bangladeshi, Bhutanese, Burmese, Cambodian, Chinese, Filipino, Hmong, Indonesian, Japanese, Korean, Laotian, Malayan, Mien, ...

When did Asian food become popular? ›

While Chinese food was introduced to America in the mid-19th century, Vietnamese (Japanese, Thai, etc.) cuisine was generally unknown to mainstream American diners until the 1970s. Coincidentally, this period also marks the genesis of fusion cuisine, a convergence of fresh foods, exotic tastes and interesting textures.

How do you celebrate AAPI Heritage Month at work? ›

AAPI Month Celebration Ideas

Invite guest speakers or host panel discussions to share personal experiences and insights. Encourage employees to share their heritage through food, music, art, or traditional clothing. Organize cultural showcases or exhibitions where employees can display and share their traditions.

What are AAPI cultural holidays? ›

AAPI Celebrations and Holidays
JanuaryFebruary
AprilMay
Songkran Choul Chnam Thmey Thingyan Water Festival Boun Pi Mai Qingming Festival (Tomb Sweeping Day) Hari Raya Aidilfitri (Eid al-Fitr)Labor Day Golden Week AAPI Heritage Month Boun Bank Fai (Rocket Festival) Vesak
JulyAugust
Islamic New YearSingapore National Day
3 more rows

When did Asians come to America? ›

The first major wave of Asian immigration to the continental United States occurred primarily on the West Coast during the California Gold Rush, starting in the 1850s.

Is Orange Chicken authentic? ›

Distinguished with its orange-flavored chili sauce, it has spawned several 'copycat' recipes. While the orange chicken is one of the most famous Chinese dishes in America, it is a purely American invention, with no authentic Chinese resturants or restaurants in China serving this dish.

What food originally comes from Asia? ›

20 Traditional foods around Asia
  • Adobo from the Philippines. Adobo is a popular Filipino cuisine in Asia. ...
  • Tom Yam from Thailand. Tom Yam is a type of hot and sour soup that typically contains shrimp. ...
  • Nasi Goreng from Indonesia. ...
  • Hummus from Lebanon. ...
  • Tonkatsu from Korea. ...
  • Baozi from China. ...
  • Kimchi from Korea. ...
  • Onigiri from Japan.

What food did China bring to America? ›

As reflected in the NYPL data, dishes like chow mein, Kung Pao chicken, hot and sour soup, egg rolls, Broccoli Beef and General Tso's chicken are most common in American Chinese cuisine.

Was Chinese food popular in the 60s? ›

It wasn't until the 1960s and 1970s that the United States got its first taste of “authentic” Chinese cuisine.

When did Japanese food become popular? ›

This cuisine became popular in the Meiji period, which is considered by many historians to be when Japan first opened itself to the outside world.

Why did Chinese food become so popular? ›

Chinese cuisine is widely consumed nowadays for a number of reasons, including its wide variety of dishes, regional variability, culinary techniques, adaptability, affordability, and its function in cultural and social experiences.

When did Chinese buffets become popular? ›

The buffets really began proliferating in the 1990s, according to Jennifer 8. Lee, a journalist and the author of The Fortune Cookie Chronicles. She said their numbers were propelled by the arrival of Fujianese immigrants who came to the U.S. and took over restaurants from Cantonese proprietors.

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