“When I started making Filipino food decades ago, there wasn’t really anyone to look up to as a visible Filipino chef,” says Robbie Hojilla. He’s a key player in the continuously evolving Filipino food scene across Canada and in charge at BBs, the colourful Toronto diner-into-dinner and Bib Gourmand recipient.
In restaurants, popups, home-based catering, and community groups like Tulaymeansbridge in Toronto, a cooperative where Filipino-Canadian chefs cook for and learn from each other, there’s a determined embrace of Pinoy cuisine afoot.
“Our cuisine has myriad influences and nuances,” says Joie Alvaro Kent, a Vancouver-based food writer who has long been advocating for Filipino cuisine. “It merits recognition without needing to be legitimised in the context of another culinary tradition.”