RedAngie
Sea Level Lady
- Joined
- Sep 10, 2015
- Messages
- 12,018
I wonder how they'd feel if anyone was insistent on ethnic purity when it comes to restaurant workers. Quite a few Chinese restaurants around here rely on Hispanic employees. Once I was at a dim sum place at the end of lunch, and the employees were already taking lunch together. They did self segregate, but they were eating the same thing.
I've worked with Europeans. Their take isn't so much about authenticity but about being good.
I suppose the oddest fusion was Indian-Chinese at the insistence of some Indian coworkers. It was vaguely Chinese food. Americanized Chinese cuisine would be more recognizable to someone visiting from China than what they served. That didn't mean it didn't serve a purpose. It was more like comfort food for Indian expats.
Authenticity is overrated in my opinion. As long as the food tastes good, I don't care if it's true to its origins.
Just over a year ago DH and I were having lunch with my 85 year old uncle and aunt at a Chinese restaurant in Naples, FL. The waitress was Hispanic. He made the cringe-worthy comment, "They let you work here? You're not Oriental." She just smiled, but was probably rolling her eyes inside.