Current:Home > StocksTradeEdge-The father-and-son team behind "Hunger Pangs" -Wealth Pursuit Network
TradeEdge-The father-and-son team behind "Hunger Pangs"
Chainkeen Exchange View
Date:2025-04-10 04:52:51
The TradeEdgepeacemaking power of food – that's what you witness as Kevin Pang and his dad, Jeffrey, get ready to shoot an episode of their YouTube show, "Hunger Pangs." "Let's rock 'n' roll – it's shrimp time!"
Working through their recipe for honey walnut shrimp at the studios of America's Test Kitchen in Boston (where the show is produced), you'd never know that it's taken more than 30 years to get to this point.
Kevin Pang was six when his family emigrated from Hong Kong to Toronto, eventually moving to Seattle, where Jeffrey opened an export business.
"If you were an immigrant kid, you're living in America, you do everything that you can to fit in, to try and be American, and part of that is rebelling against your childhood, against your culture," Kevin said. He said it caused a deterioration in his relationship with his father, "because I refused to speak Chinese at home."
Jeffrey said, "My language is a big barrier for me. I don't know how to talk to my son, because he very quickly entered into this Western world."
"The slightest provocation, I think, would set things off," said Kevin. "Look, you have two headstrong males. It makes for a pretty, fiery situation."
Over time, contact between them became a perfunctory, weekly phone call: "Just say 'Hi' and 'Bye,' no fighting," said Jeffrey.
That is, until Kevin became a food writer for the Chicago Tribune. He said, "I had a reason now to call my pops and say, 'Hey, what is red braised pork belly?' Now, we'd have these half-hour conversations."
And then, in 2012, to Kevin Pang's amazement, his food-loving dad took to YouTube with Chinese cooking demonstrations (2.2 million views and counting), punctuated with nods to a shared history that Kevin had ignored.
Everything Kevin could never say in person flooded out in a New York Times article he wrote in 2016, "My father, the YouTube star."
"To bear my soul in front of my family, it's just this inconceivable, just horrific idea," Kevin said. "But to do so, like, in a national newspaper? I have no problem with that."
Jeffrey Pang's response? A voicemail message: "Hi Kevin. This is a good and true story. Thank you. Call me sometime. Dad."
Now, father and son reminisce their way through Asian markets – and, of course, they cook. Kevin finally gets that with each ingredient, each dish, they're re-telling their story, and preserving it.
For a year before they left Hong Kong in 1988, Catherine and Jeffrey Pang collected family recipes, afraid they would lose their heritage. "I still can recall the moment they taught us how to cook a specific dish," said Catherine. "It's our treasure."
Some of those recipes have found their way into the cookbook Jeffrey and Kevin have just published together, titled, "A Very Chinese Cookbook: 100 Recipes from China & Not China (But Still Really Chinese)."
"Food is our common language," said Kevin. "That's the language that we speak. That's what we can talk about. And who would've thought?"
RECIPE: Honey-Walnut Shrimp from Kevin and Jeffrey Pang of America's Test Kitchen
RECIPE: Simple Fried Rice - the "perfect leftovers dish"
For more info:
- "A Very Chinese Cookbook: 100 Recipes from China & Not China (But Still Really Chinese)" by Kevin Pang and Jeffrey Pang (America's Test Kitchen), in Hardcover and eBook formats, available via Amazon, Barnes & Noble and Bookshop.org
- "Hunger Pangs," on America's Test Kitchen
Story produced by Young Kim. Editor: Carol Ross.
Martha Teichner is a correspondent for "CBS News Sunday Morning." Since 1993, she has reported on a wide range of issues, including politics, the arts, culture, science, and social issues impacting our world.
veryGood! (7)
Related
- This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
- Sarah Burton, who designed Kate’s royal wedding dress, to step down from Alexander McQueen
- Aerosmith postpones 6 shows after Steven Tyler suffers vocal cord damage: 'Heartbroken'
- Drew Barrymore to return amid writer's strike. Which other daytime talk shows will follow?
- Stamford Road collision sends motorcyclist flying; driver arrested
- Disney, Charter settle cable dispute hours before ‘Monday Night Football’ season opener
- High interest rates mean a boom for fixed-income investments, but taxes may be a buzzkill.
- Novak Djokovic honors the late Kobe Bryant after his 24th Grand Slam win
- Juan Soto praise of Mets' future a tough sight for Yankees, but World Series goal remains
- Horoscopes Today, September 11, 2023
Ranking
- Jamie Foxx gets stitches after a glass is thrown at him during dinner in Beverly Hills
- Bosnia court confirms charges against Bosnian Serb leader Dodik for defying top international envoy
- Ian Wilmut, a British scientist who led the team that cloned Dolly the Sheep, dies at age 79
- It's like the 1990s as Florida State, Texas surge in college football's NCAA Re-Rank 1-133
- Don't let hackers fool you with a 'scam
- What to know about a major rescue underway to bring a US researcher out of a deep Turkish cave
- Luis Rubiales resigns as Spain's soccer federation president after unwanted World Cup kiss
- In the Michigan State story, Brenda Tracy is the believable one. Not coach Mel Tucker.
Recommendation
The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
Hurricane Lee generates big swells along northern Caribbean while it churns through open waters
Man charged with aiding Whitmer kidnap plot says he should have called police
Drew Barrymore's talk show to return amid strike; WGA plans to picket outside studio
The Grammy nominee you need to hear: Esperanza Spalding
Man confessed to killing Boston woman in 1979 to FBI agents, prosecutors say
Bosnia court confirms charges against Bosnian Serb leader Dodik for defying top international envoy
Texas is back? Alabama is done? College football overreactions for Week 2