The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Filipino-American finds a voice through food

- Susan Puckett is a cookbook author and former food editor of The Atlanta JournalCon­stitution. Follow her at susanpucke­tt.com. By Susan Puckett

“I didn’t grow up eating Gerber baby food,” Alvin Cailan tells his friend, filmmaker Alexandra Cuerdo. Rather, he was weaned on lugaw — a simple rice porridge his grandmothe­r always promised would make him feel better when he was sick. “Grandma was right,” Cuerdo says. “Filipino food is soul food.”

It’s one of many conversati­ons that season Cailan’s newly released “Amboy: Recipes from the Filipino-American Dream” (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, $35). Both cookbook and memoir, and written with Cuerdo, it chronicles his journey from first-generation American raised in a blue-collar neighborho­od of East LA to nationally acclaimed chef, YouTube sensation, and champion of the Filipino food movement.

“Amboy” is Tagalog slang for an American-born Filipino. It’s how Cailan defines himself, as well as the name of his latest venture, a burger counter and butcher shop in LA’s Chinatown.

Nearly a decade earlier, he birthed a food truck called Eggslut, which earned a following for its namesake dish, a coddled egg atop a chivefleck­ed potato puree. Food writer Ruth Reichl deemed it “heaven in a spoon.” Long lines followed, then a brickand-mortar restaurant.

You’ll find that recipe for his post-culinary school, breakout creation in “Amboy.” But the heart of the book comes in recipes such as his great-grandmothe­r’s Patis Fried Chicken brined in Filipino fish sauce; Pan de sal (sweet rolls) inspired by “my latchkey Costco kid life;” and Lechon (roast pork) that includes instructio­ns for building a fire pit.

Lacking the backyard and the will to pull that off, I gave Hot Silog a try instead: crispy skillet-seared hot dogs served with fluffy, soy-seasoned Garlic Fried Rice (sinangag) and a sunny side up egg. It was an unexpected and delicious combinatio­n that offered a glimpse into the Filipino-American food experience, and made me hungry to learn more.

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