Editor’s Note: This is a guest post by Hudson Yang
Hey all, I’m Hudson Yang, and I play Eddie Huang on ABC’s Fresh Off the Boat. You probably know Eddie is based on the real Eddie Huang, who’s an amazing chef and writer — his restaurant Baohaus in NYC is the bomb, and he’s opening one in LA soon, yeaaahhhh. Eddie’s memoir about growing up as a Taiwanese American kid in Orlando, Florida turned into our show.
When they cast me as Eddie, they did it in part because in a lot of ways, we’re alike. I mean, it’s not just that we kind of look alike: We say what’s on our minds and we do what we feel like we gotta do, and we both really love food.
I always have, since I was a little kid. My grandma on my mom’s side, who lived with us, would cook all the time — it was her way to show that she loved us. I grew up on amazing Taiwanese food (and leftovers from the food, and leftovers from the leftovers….). She let me help her cook, showing me how to use a knife the right way to peel vegetables, stirring the pot. Once I got burned and my dad flipped out. But I told him it was my fault and that I’d be more careful. I kept on helping my grandma…and even when I got burned again, I pretended it didn’t happen so he wouldn’t know until it healed.
The favorite parts of Fresh Off the Boat are the scenes where I get to cook. Like the chili cook-off last season, where Louis, my TV dad, and I are rivals trying to win the Golden Pot award for best chili. If you haven’t seen it I won’t spoil it but let’s say Eddie did pretty good. For that episode I had to pretend to make the same pot of chili over and over again. I could’ve just dumped anything in there, but actually when I was off camera I was practicing cutting up the vegetables so I could work on my knife skills. (You still wouldn’t have wanted to eat that chili though, I think it was like 80 percent onions by the time we were finished.)
Anyway, the real Eddie is still my inspiration. I’ve seen his shows on the Internet and he’s hilarious and he really knows how to make food into more than just something you eat — it’s something you live. I’ve said before in interviews that I want to open a restaurant when I grow up, and have a really experimental menu that will blow people’s minds. But if I’m going to do that I have to start learning now, the way Eddie did when he was a kid, helping out in his dad’s restaurant.
I asked my dad to send me to cooking camp this summer, and I spent weeks learning how to make real meals from Chef Eric — all-day cooking. And then my dad’s friends at ISAtv offered to help make a web series for me that’s about learning about Asian food from all kinds of places — how to make it, and how to eat it. We came up with the name TASTE TEST WITH HUDSON YANG, and we’ve shot four episodes so far…and the first one debuted tonight, in which I hang out with the great gang at Los Angeles’s most amazing BBQ place, The Park’s Finest. They use their Filipino roots to turn meat into magic. I can still taste it even as I’m writing this. The head smoke master Johneric is amazing — he’s full of stories about his family and the traditions of cooking, Pinoy style. His wife Christine is super-cool, she really knows how to run a business that makes people happy, and showed me what it’s like to be a good server…because food isn’t just putting stuff on a plate, it’s about getting people to enjoy their time together.
You can watch the first episode of TASTE TEST below. I’ll keep on writing about my adventures in food land as each new episode comes out, so yo, don’t stop reading, and don’t stop eating!