Mama Leahs Coconut Beef Pakrs Finest

Cafeteria-thin beef tri-tip, mac and cheese, ribs and 16-hour roasted pulled pork. Fresh cornbread, hot links and roasted craven. From a vantage point, the offerings at Park's Finest are like every other barbecue restaurant in Los Angeles. But delve in deeper and y'all'll discover the important subtleties.

The hot links are crafted with a sweet Filipino sausage, and the corn bread is mixed with a fleck of rice flour and baked on a assistant leaf for flavor. The beef is served in a coconut milk foam, best ladled over a plate of steaming jasmine rice. The signature sauce is a delectable concoction of vinegar, garlic, chili, a nod to the adobo flavors of the Philippines.

"The whole idea is to dip the food in the sawsawan," chef and owner Johneric Concordia says, referring to the Filipino word for sauce, which can be used as both a verb and a noun.

Park's Finest, coconut beef
Coconut beef |  Clarissa Wei

Park'due south Finest is named later on Echo Park, where Concordia and his buddies spent their childhood on the grill of every neighborhood park, roasting meat on charcoal.

"It was a mode to just hang out. You had a DJ and a barbecue and we kept out of trouble," he says. "We were the barbecue crew that partied the all-time."

Concordia comes from a long line of grill masters. His father was a Filipino-American immigrant who loved food. When he was enlisted in the US Navy during the Vietnam War, the story is that he would routinely raid the commissary for ingredients during their cookout sessions on the top deck of the boat. Information technology was he who taught his sons the nuts.

Years later, in 2009, Park'due south Finest was born as a catering visitor and finally, in 2012, as a full-fledged brick-and-mortar restaurant in the eye of historic Filipinotown. Behind the scenes are five ethnically Filipino business partners who all grew upwardly in Los Angeles. The menu pays deep respects to their heritage. The San Pablo pulled pork is a homage to the province Concordia's family came from and the Mama Leah's coconut beef is named after his grandmother, who was a 7th-day Adventist that didn't eat pork.

Park's Finest, Johneric Concordia
Johneric Concordia |  Clarissa Wei

"The dish was originally made with water buffalo, coconut cream, fish sauce and chili," Concordia says. When the family immigrated to the United States, it became a family heirloom of sorts.

Fifty-fifty the Ann's cornbread bibingka simmers with history. It was a signature of Concordia's god brother'south loftier schoolhouse sweetheart — Ann, the dish'south namesake, who would bring it to all the parties. And the fact that the brusk ribs are paired with horseradish cream is because of Concordia's father'south obsession with Arby's Horsey sauce.

While the flavors of the nutrient are inspired by his heritage, Concordia doesn't like to categorize his food as strictly Filipino barbecue. At best, it'south Filipino-inspired barbecue.

He laughs when I bring up that people have dubbed 2017 the year of Filipino food and the latest big food trend.

 "What does that even mean?" he says, noting that Filipino cuisine has been around for centuries.

"We're Los Angeles barbecue," he insists. Concordia and his buddies, later on all, spent their entire lives grilling in and around East Los Angeles, earlier information technology became gentrified. Vendors, he said, would sell elote (Mexican street corn) on the park corners while they held their barbecues. While the elote vendors exist to some degree today, it's simply non the same.

"Growing up, it was always corn on the cob. You don't accept a dude that walks the blocks anymore," he says, with a hint of nostalgia in his voice. For that reason, elote has snuck its way into the card at Park'southward, with freshly grated Parmesan cheese and cayenne pepper.

Nonetheless, the restaurant is far more than than only an attempt to hang on to what was. It's a bold attempt to reclaim the community and ward off attempts at gentrification.

"We barbecued it on every single street in Echo Park and expanded throughout Los Angeles," he says. "We're setting the flag in at present and maxim we have the history."

Park's Finest, short ribs
Short ribs |  Clarissa Wei

Whereas other traditional Asian enclaves in Los Angeles like Chinatown, Koreatown and Little Tokyo are flourishing because of economic investment from overseas financing and associations, Concordia points out that Filipinotown has been deadening to catch up.

Only what they lacked in money, they made upwards for in community interest.

"We're a product of the environment. We didn't have coin. The whole community kept us out of gangs," he says, noting that it was non-profit agencies like the Search to Involve Pilipino Americans that mentored them and kept them out of the streets as kids. He as well credits the late Michael Lao, the former dean of Glendale Community College'southward Hospitality and Tourism department, for providing them the resource on how to start their ain business.

More From The Migrant Kitchen

"Half of usa were high school drib-outs and only two of us had nutrient experience. I worked at a Denny'south," Concordia says, referring to the co-founders of Park's.

With that, he feels forever indebted to the customs that raised him and hopes that Park's will be 1 of many future Filipino-owned and operated businesses in celebrated Filipinotown.

"Come here, we'll feed y'all and take care of you," he says. "If you want to bring your guest from out of town and you desire something you lot're non going to have in any other city, this is information technology."

Park's Finest, pork ribs + coconut beef
Pork ribs and coconut beef  | Clarissa Wei

Top image: Pork ribs, kokosnoot beefiness and mac and cheese | Clarissa Wei

haneyarne1952.blogspot.com

Source: https://www.kcet.org/shows/the-migrant-kitchen/filipino-inspired-barbecue-at-parks-finest

0 Response to "Mama Leahs Coconut Beef Pakrs Finest"

Post a Comment

Iklan Atas Artikel

Iklan Tengah Artikel 1

Iklan Tengah Artikel 2

Iklan Bawah Artikel