Los Angeles Times

Fish tacos, flip-flops and sharks in suits

- People love street food. Every surfer I met said the best part about going to Mexico was having the tacos, and they craved them when they came back. At first, then slowly they start to enjoy it. We grill or blacken the fish instead of deep frying, using

Wing Lam, co-founder of Wahoo’s Fish Taco, was recently caught savoring shrimp that had been minced, sauteed, breaded and rolled in seaweed at Capital Seafood in Irvine. The California section’s Anh Do grilled him about Southern California and Baja California’s overlappin­g food, business and leisure cultures, then emailed him questions and crunched the conversati­on into this: Hard to believe, but fish tacos were largely foreign to much of Southern California when you brought them back from Baja California in the 1980s. Now they’re a staple. Why? Do Mexicans think your fish taco is too gringo? Baja has shaped generation­s of teenage California­ns. What’s the allure? around to make sure you’re 21. The spirit of the place transfers to what people can do and there is amazing freedom. They get a sample of the less structured life, a belief that things will be OK tomorrow. Going to Mexico is a rite of passage. It’s part of how we grow up. Describe Baja’s influence on SoCal.

People in Baja have perfected this beyondspri­ng-break vibe. They are relaxed without trying. They are casual without appearing too casual. Here, it’s guys going to the office in flip-flops vs. shoes, in shorts vs. pants. They carry that attitude into meetings. And then the suited business sharks eat you entrepre-beachbum types for lunch, right? How much less chill would SoCal business culture be without the surf influence? When you’re not surfing and cooking you teach? Has The Times’ coverage of the horrible conditions faced by Mexican farmworker­s affected your business practices?

What about the conditions for the workers in Thailand? And elsewhere in Asia? And for the workers here in the U.S.? We would love to do what they call fair trade as long as the consumer is willing to pay for it. The questions are: Who’s going to pay for it? Who’s going to enforce it? Is there still money to be made by folks on both sides of the border? Where?

Eco-tourism, surfing safaris, find another local dish that hasn’t hit here yet — or blend it with another cuisine. The point is not to be so regimented. Eat with your hands. Have Mexico’s narco terrorists affected your love of Baja?

Taco Bell or King Taco?

What do you ride? Would you rather be making surfboards?

 ??  ?? WING LAM Selfie taken at Wahoo’s Santa Ana office.
WING LAM Selfie taken at Wahoo’s Santa Ana office.

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