I come to understand my ancestral past by repeated stories that have been embellished over time or through family recipes that have been orally shared and lost in memory. Born 2nd-generation in the United States to a teenage mother, I fear the possibility that one day these roots—though inherently a part of me—will be weakened or lost over time. With these fears, the little that I know of my lineage, and as someone of the Pilipinx diaspora who is also a woman, brown, queer, and a migrant abroad, I actively work in the unearthing of these narratives: My recipe for Adobo includes as many aspects of the coconut to echo my family’s non-operating farm in the Philippines; I make my grandmother’s Lumpia Shanghai dish in honor of her sacrifice and migration to the USA in the 1960s. With these explorations, I wish to envision and build deeper relationships with home to pass on to future kin.
Sayote Slaw — Acidic, bright, and a touch floral; my own interpretation of a Thai green papaya salad, rooted in Filipino ingredients. Shredded chayote and mango pickled in coconut vinegar, topped with pink peppercorn.