As a Chicana journalist, how I use food as a vehicle for empowerment. [View on web]( [An illustration of two women in standing behind a molcajete filled with tomatoes, onions jalapeños, and avocados ]( Illustration by [Yeti Iglesias]( I came up in a generation of journalism thatâs been punctuated by the late Jonathan Gold and Anthony Bourdain, two iconic figures for their work humanizing the experiences of immigrants through the lens of food. When I was a young reporter in Orange County, I got to meet Gold at a journalism workshop. Knowing him was like having access to my own personal critic. Iâd send him Facebook messages when I was planning to drive into Downtown LA for a night out: Know of any good taquerias in [fill in the blank] neighborhood? Years later, Iâd moved to Detroit for a reporting job and found myself spending my first few months vegging out on old episodes of Bourdainâs No Reservations on Netflix. I always gravitated towards his American episodes because they provided a beautiful representation of communities that other media outlets either maligned or ignored altogether. And every single time I read [Bourdainâs comments about Mexicans]( â about how Americans love our culture, our food, our labor, but not our patria â I find myself with a tick in my throat. He just got it. Both of these men played critical roles in my development as a journalist: They made communities of color feel seen. They helped many people like me realize that our food traditions arenât just worth writing about â our foodways have been contributing to the betterment of society for a millenia. We, as Mexicans and other Latinos, are essential to the fabric of just about every aspect of American life, particularly when it comes to the restaurant industry and food. And yet, weâre often perceived as a threat. Even members of our own community join this chorus: In 2016, the Mexican-born Marco Gutierrez, who founded Latinos for Trump, warned that if weâre not careful, weâre â[going to have taco trucks on every corner](.â So imagine taking Bourdain and Goldâs mission personally: Telling our own stories, using food as the vehicle for empowerment and self-actualization instead of allowing others to insist that America is inundated with too many taquerias, that Latine contributions have no value, or that we as Mexicans need to keep our heads down, be grateful that weâre even invited to the table so as to not upset the status quo. In 2017, I launched [Tostada Magazine](, a Detroit-based site that operates under the premise that food â and food journalism â has the ability to uplift communities and preserve culture. The site now features hundreds of stories about the taqueros and [taqueras]( whoâve transformed how Detroiters eat, about the many food [traditions]( around [Ramadan]( in recognition of the Detroit regionâs huge Muslim American population, about what [Venezuelan]( Major League Baseball players like to eat whenever theyâre in town and are in need of a little taste of home. The work continues, but now with a much larger platform at my fingertips: Last month, Eater launched [Hay Comida en la Casa](, a recurring column that creates a space for exploration, for the Latinx community to celebrate our traditions, and to help each other feel seen â not to prove our worth to the outside world, but for our own healing. The familiar phrase â what a parent would say to a child asking for fast food or for a treat when out and about â is rooted in the home. What we eat at home has a ripple effect on everything we do, including our sense of self-worth, the way we see the world, and the way we treat others. As a column, Hay Comida plays off the child and parent dynamic of this phrase, focusing on family meals and familial culinary traditions within the Latinx community. Within this framework, thereâs ample opportunity to capture the breadth of the Latinx experience, from examining the ways that generations of Mexican cooks have [harnessed the power of verdolagas]( to nourish their households to considering [what breakfast might look like]( in a multicultural household. The goal is to help create a world where we never have to question our value based on the mediaâs perception of us. And to remind us of the ancestral wisdom passed on by our ancestors providing us with strength and nourishment â one tamal, taco, or tostada at a time. âSerena Maria Daniels, Eater Detroit editor More for the table: - Earlier this year, I had a chance to interview Mexican American actor and entertainer [Mario Lopez]( about his taco-centric TikToks, which serve as vehicles for self-expression.
- That moment when I learned that my college novio from Mexico City was a big fan of [tacos with ketchup](, forever dispelling my notions of âauthenticity.â
- One of my compañeros in the food writing world, Texas Monthly taco editor José R. Ralat, provides us with an essential explainer on [guisado](, the rule-breaking foundation for myriad Mexican dishes.
- Speaking of guisados, my mom was a guisado expert and could transform food pantry staples into [chile verde](, one of my favorite fillings for burritos. TODAYâS INSTAGRAM Over the 2023 holiday season, my mom and I decided to revisit a time-honored family ritual: the [tamalada](. This time, we started a new tradition by making hundreds of tamales with friends in our home in Detroit. [Instagram]( If you like this email, please forward it to a friend. If you aren't signed up for this newsletter, you can [do so right here](.
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