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Author Topic: What about the Hmong? Are they under  (Read 140 times)

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Offline theking

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What about the Hmong? Are they under
« on: May 26, 2023, 03:24:50 AM »
...represented too??  I believe Indians and Filipinos are the second and third largest Asian ethnic groups in America behind the Chinese..???:

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Indian and Filipino restaurants underrepresent ed in the Asian food scene, new study says

Indian and Filipino restaurants underrepresent ed in the Asian food scene, new study says
How immigration and colonialism have made Chinese and Japanese food staples in the U.S. — but have left Indian food in the dust.


Indian and Filipino restaurants are two of the most underrepresent ed cuisines when compared to their respective population sizes in the U.S., according to a new study by the Pew Research Center.

While Asian restaurants as a whole dominate much of the country’s food scene — amounting to 12% of all restaurants despite Asian Americans being only 7% of the population — the subgroups that fall under it have drastically different levels of representation .

Chinese restaurants are the most common type of Asian restaurant by far, which experts said is unsurprising. In fact, 39% of all Asian restaurants in the country are Chinese restaurants, outranking Japanese and Thai, which follow at 28% and 11%, respectively.

Comparatively, cuisines like Indian and Filipino comprise just 7% and 1% of all Asian restaurants, despite collectively making up nearly 40% of the Asian population.

There are reasons for this, and they’re tangled up in immigration patterns, colonialism and income status.

“I think what unites these two cases is higher education and the capacity to speak English,” said Krishnendu Ray, an associate professor of Food Studies at New York University. “If you speak English and have a college degree, you do not get into the restaurant business. The restaurant business is a very tight business, a very labor intensive business. It’s mostly sweat capital.”

Patterns of immigration from India and the Philippines have created two of the most college-educated, English-proficient groups under the AAPI umbrella. While new immigrants might be drawn to the restaurant business, their first-generation children historically are not, Ray said.

There’s also a difference between the ethnic cuisine being marketed to consumers — and who is actually doing the cooking.

“Depending on the city, depending on the place, what we call Indian food is largely cooked by Bangladeshis,” he said. “There are many more Japanese restaurants in the United States, but most Japanese restaurants in the United States are not run by Japanese chefs … most Japanese-style food in the U.S. today is produced by Koreans and Chinese and the Latinx population.”

But on the demand side, Indian food is simply not as popular, he said. In the American restaurant scene, Italian, Chinese and Mexican dominate. Every state in the U.S. has a Chinese restaurant, the study said, a result of Chinese migration east from California in the 19th and 20th centuries.



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Offline Hung_Low

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Re: What about the Hmong? Are they under
« Reply #1 on: May 26, 2023, 08:04:25 AM »
...represented too??  I believe Indians and Filipinos are the second and third largest Asian ethnic groups in America behind the Chinese..???:

Quote
Indian and Filipino restaurants underrepresent ed in the Asian food scene, new study says

Indian and Filipino restaurants underrepresent ed in the Asian food scene, new study says
How immigration and colonialism have made Chinese and Japanese food staples in the U.S. — but have left Indian food in the dust.


Indian and Filipino restaurants are two of the most underrepresent ed cuisines when compared to their respective population sizes in the U.S., according to a new study by the Pew Research Center.

While Asian restaurants as a whole dominate much of the country’s food scene — amounting to 12% of all restaurants despite Asian Americans being only 7% of the population — the subgroups that fall under it have drastically different levels of representation .

Chinese restaurants are the most common type of Asian restaurant by far, which experts said is unsurprising. In fact, 39% of all Asian restaurants in the country are Chinese restaurants, outranking Japanese and Thai, which follow at 28% and 11%, respectively.

Comparatively, cuisines like Indian and Filipino comprise just 7% and 1% of all Asian restaurants, despite collectively making up nearly 40% of the Asian population.

There are reasons for this, and they’re tangled up in immigration patterns, colonialism and income status.

“I think what unites these two cases is higher education and the capacity to speak English,” said Krishnendu Ray, an associate professor of Food Studies at New York University. “If you speak English and have a college degree, you do not get into the restaurant business. The restaurant business is a very tight business, a very labor intensive business. It’s mostly sweat capital.”

Patterns of immigration from India and the Philippines have created two of the most college-educated, English-proficient groups under the AAPI umbrella. While new immigrants might be drawn to the restaurant business, their first-generation children historically are not, Ray said.

There’s also a difference between the ethnic cuisine being marketed to consumers — and who is actually doing the cooking.

“Depending on the city, depending on the place, what we call Indian food is largely cooked by Bangladeshis,” he said. “There are many more Japanese restaurants in the United States, but most Japanese restaurants in the United States are not run by Japanese chefs … most Japanese-style food in the U.S. today is produced by Koreans and Chinese and the Latinx population.”

But on the demand side, Indian food is simply not as popular, he said. In the American restaurant scene, Italian, Chinese and Mexican dominate. Every state in the U.S. has a Chinese restaurant, the study said, a result of Chinese migration east from California in the 19th and 20th centuries.


I don't think education has anything to do with opening a restaurant... I mean lots of Viet, Hmong, Lao and other race that came to the US aren't that educated and we don't all gravitate to the restaurant business. It's more of a trend thing... e.g. a Chinese man open 1st restaurant, it's doing good then other Chinese want in on the act, etc etc. Just like those nail parlors... majority are Viet own or gas/hotel majority own by Indian, etc etc



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