KORE E Magazine – August 2019

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COLUMN

food
for
thought

TEXT BY OLIVER WANG


Con Fusion

It’s only natural that food ways mingle and merge in a diverse society, but the


term “fusion” is dated. Can we come up with a more relevant label?


There are few food terms that have turned more rancid
than “fusion.” When fusion cuisine first gained currency
in the 1980s, it was supposed to communicate a kind
of inventive, worldly sophistication, where European
fine-dining techniques embraced primarily Asian influ-
ences. In Los Angeles, the most prominent example was
Wolfgang Puck’s Chinois on Main, opened in 1983, where
the famed Austrian chef served everything from curried
oysters with salmon roe to papaya with frozen Zinfandel
to a signature Chinese chicken salad that popularized the
dish nationally.
However, like most food fads, bad examples of fusion
soon followed. In many cases, dishes felt simultaneously
pretentious and lazy, as if chefs were just choosing items
from Column A and then splicing them with something
from Column B. Think wasabi mashed potatoes or duck
confit egg rolls. As Night + Market’s Kris Yenbamroong
writes in his restaurant’s self-titled cookbook, by the
nadir of the trend in the 1980s, “the only chefs doing
‘Asian fusion’ were white guys who put lemongrass in their
beurre blanc.”
As a result, by the end of the 1990s, fusion cuisine’s
associations became unavoidably uncool. Today, it’s hard
to find any chefs who openly embrace the term. Instead,
you’ll hear them use less tainted codewords such as


“mash-up” or “global,” but it’s still the same idea at heart:
the blending of different food cultures. Fusion, as market-
ing-speak, may be passé, but the fusing of foodways is as
omnipresent as ever, from hipster food trucks to Miche-
lin-starred restaurants. Don’t call it a comeback, fusion
has been here for years.

For thousands of years, forces such as trade, migration
and imperialism moved people, ingredients and cooking
practices into contact across continents. For example, the
Scoville heat bombs in Indian cooking wouldn’t be possi-
ble if not for chili peppers that came to the subcontinent
from Central and South America, via Portuguese traders.
Likewise, poached-chicken rice may have originated on
Hainan Island, but it was Singapore, 2,100 miles away, that
eventually adopted it as a national dish.
Asian Pacific Islander American cuisine, especially, is
a product of adaptation and blending. For example, when
the first Chinese restaurants appeared in Gold Rush-era
California, cooks didn’t have access to fresh, traditional
ingredients, nor were waves of experienced Chinese chefs
braving the boat journey across the Pacific. Instead, the
dishes that emerged—think chop suey or chow mein—
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