Abi Balingit’s Cookbook ‘Mayumu’ Is an Ode to the Sweet Side of Filipino Cuisine

If you’ve marked up your copy of Claire Saffitz’s Dessert Person with so many sugar spills and butter stains that it’s barely readable anymore, allow me to introduce you to Mayumu: Filipino American Desserts Remixed, The Dusky Kitchen blogger Abi Balingit’s brand-new cookbook.

Mayumu is crammed full of recipes for adobo chocolate chip cookies, halo-halo baked Alaska, lychee madeleines with hibiscus tea glaze and dried rose petals, and a host of other sweets inspired by the mix of Filipino and Western-style dishes Balingit grew up eating—and that are sure to make you the most popular person at your office cookie swap or school bake sale. (Or, best of all, you could make Balingit’s recipes for no occasion whatsoever; trust me, they’ll get eaten.)

Vogue recently spoke to Balingit about her very favorite cookbooks, finding a literary agent on Twitter after posting one of her culinary creations, and the joy of seeing people make her recipes at home. Read the full interview below.

Vogue: First off, what sparked the idea for this cookbook? 

Abi Balingit: I basically was just doing my thing on my blog in the summer of 2020, casually posting things I made on Twitter or Instagram in tandem with these treat boxes I was making, where I would donate the proceeds to mutual aid funds. I made these Lao Gan Ma chili crisp cupcakes, and the person who is now my literary agent reached out to me over Twitter and was like, “Hey, are you interested in writing a cookbook?” It was so wild because I was only really a couple months into writing anything for my blog, so there were maybe five posts to my name. [Laughs.] They were just so on board and excited about what I was doing, and I was like, “I think I would be really interested in writing a Filipino American dessert cookbook of some sort.” What I was making, even at the start of the pandemic, was always kind of fusion stuff, Asian American and mostly Filipino, because that’s what I know best.

Did you have favorite cookbooks that you looked at for inspiration? 

One of my most recent inspirations was Filipinx by Angela Dimayuga and Ligaya Mishan. That book was just so modern aesthetically and it spoke to me; my mood board contained a lot of that book. There’s Mi Cocina by Rick Martínez, which is so beautiful. So many cookbooks have kind of laid the foundation for the cookbook I was able to make, and it’s so interesting to kind of play around with format. Then there’s Amboy by Alvin Cailan, the founder and head chef of Eggslut. He’s also a Filipino American chef, but there’s a bit more memoir in his cookbook, and I think that’s an element I added in when I was writing.

For all the latest fasion News Click Here 

Read original article here

Denial of responsibility! TechAI is an automatic aggregator around the global media. All the content are available free on Internet. We have just arranged it in one platform for educational purpose only. In each content, the hyperlink to the primary source is specified. All trademarks belong to their rightful owners, all materials to their authors. If you are the owner of the content and do not want us to publish your materials on our website, please contact us by email – [email protected]. The content will be deleted within 24 hours.