Hi,
Yesterday Louisa Chu and I were present for the last culinary panel at the Printer's Row Book Fair featuring:
"What Immigrants Bring to the Table," a panel discussion with authors Nicole Mones ("The Last Chinese Chef"), Bich Minh Nguyen ("Stealing Buddha's Dinner") and Marilyn Pocius ("A Cook's Guide to Chicago"), moderated by Good Eating staff reporter Robin Mather Jenkins.
Nicole Mones has lived in China for the last 30 years. When she visits the United States, she interviews Chinese chef immigrants for profiles. She claimed these classicly trained Chinese chefs are frustrated with their American audience. These Chinese chefs complain Americans often sit in the very same location ordering the very same food every time. They are waiting for the day Americans will eat the classic Chinese food they trained to make.
I related to Nicole Mones how often the waitstaff defeats people by suggesting, "You won't like it." "You cannot have it." Sometimes just a simple, "No!" Can it really be true the waitstaff are misrepresenting the frustrated Chef to the customers? Until Nicole related the story of the unhappy chef, I always assumed the whole restaurant staff was in complete harmony denying American customers authentic food. Nicole affirmed the front of the house staff is concerned about saving face. They don't want the conflicts or problems that may arise if customers are disappointed by their dining experience. They much prefer we stay on the path of already accepted American customer Chinese food choices.
I inquired with Nicole if bypassing the staff going directly the kitchen may change our fates. Nicole advised this may not be the best strategy since the chef often does not speak English. Instead she proposed a two-prong approach: check out Chinese restaurants at dinner time to find if they are packed with Chinese. If yes, then it is likely the food there is prepared to Chinese-taste. She then suggested turning on all your charm and people skills to influence the staff into accepting you want food made to Chinese-taste, not American-taste. She said this may take some cultivation though it will be very worthwhile.
Robin Mather Jenkins offered the usefull comment while a preparation may be authentic, it does not mean you will always like it. Later speaking with Robin after the talk, I concurred with her thought though I do advise I will still pay for the dish. This is not only a courtesy to the restaurant who reluctantly served you. It helps the next American who may want to eat the same sometime. Your rejection, especially if you demand not to pay for the ordered food, will make the next American food adventurer's efforts a lot harder.
Regards,