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Thursday, June 14, 2012
Andrew Zimmern: Filipino Food is the Next Big Thing
Andrew Zimmern? I knew him! Well, not personally but I was able to watched his show, "Bizarre Foods with Andrew Zimmern", on TLC many times already. His shows exposed different exotic and unusual food offered in restaurant all over the world. From what I've seen, I believe he has the 'say' to announced or predict that Filipino Food is the next big thing.
And Filipinos should rejoice and must be thankful about it, not because our food can now compete to other Asian food, but because someone has noticed that there is something special about Filipino food.
'Filipino food is the Next Big Thing' - Andrew Zimmern
By InterAksyon.com
"I predict, two years from now, Filipino food will be what we will have been talking about for six months," said Bizarre Foods host Andrew Zimmern in an interview with TODAY.com. "I think that's going to be the next big thing."
The story titled "Andrew Zimmern: Filipino food is the 'next big thing'" came out Tuesday on the Bites on TODAY blog, which is, according to the website, part of the MSNBC Digital Network.
The blog lets its readers in on "exciting eats and interesting trends," allowing its audience to "get up close and personal with fab food personalities."
Zimmern is one such personality, being a multi-awarded chef, TV host, food writer, and teacher, according to the Bizarre Foods website.
"I want to go on record—this is not something that’s hot now somewhere and will get hot everywhere else," Zimmern went on to say. "It’s just starting. I think it’s going to take another year and a half to get up to critical mass, but everybody loves Chinese food, Thai food, Japanese food, and it’s all been exploited.
The Filipinos combined the best of all of that with Spanish technique. The Spanish were a colonial power there for 500 years, and they left behind adobo and cooking in vinegar—techniques that, applied to those tropical Asian ingredients, are miraculous.
San Diego is now a big enough ethnic population of Filipinos that chefs are going there and seeing stuff. I think it’ll creep up into Los Angeles and from there go around the rest of the country."
The Travel Channel's Bizarre Foods with Andrew Zimmern has him going around the world, searching for adventure plate after plate.
According to the show's website, it has taken him to, among others, a restaurant in Namibia for a serving of "rancid fat drippings and roasted cow tongue;" an eatery in Syria for a dish of "sheep feet and intestines;" and a Malobi Village in Suriname for a cooking lesson in "grilled bombi lizard."
Zimmern went to the Philippines in the show's first season, where he tried Soup No. 5 in Angono, dinuguan in Pampanga, and snails cooked in gata in Puerto Princesa.
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