Perhaps my opinion is shaped not only by taste, but by memory, migration, family, and history. Food is never simply food for Filipinos. It is identity. It is storytelling. It is survival. It is celebration.
For more than fifteen years since I started blogging in 2009, I have written about Filipino culture, immigration, family gatherings, Asian traditions, and the emotional connection between food and memory. Time and again, one truth emerges: no matter how far Filipinos travel around the world, they carry their cuisine with them.
A Cuisine Born From Many Worlds
Filipino cuisine is unlike any other Asian cuisine because it reflects centuries of cultural blending. Indigenous Malay roots mixed with Chinese traders, Spanish colonization, Mexican influences from the Manila-Acapulco galleon trade, and later American influence. The result is a cuisine that is both Asian and uniquely Filipino.
A bowl of adobo tells a colonial story. Pancit reflects Chinese migration. Lechon reminds us of Spanish fiestas. Halo-halo captures the tropical creativity of island life. Sinigang represents the Filipino love of sour flavors, while kare-kare reflects the richness of peanut-based stews found nowhere else in Asia.
Unlike cuisines that focus on uniformity and precision, Filipino food is deeply regional and family-centered. Every province has its own specialty. Every grandmother has her own recipe. Even among siblings, arguments erupt over which family member makes the best lumpia.
Why Filipino Food Is Underrated
For many decades, Filipino cuisine lived quietly in the shadow of more internationally recognized Asian cuisines such as Chinese, Japanese, Thai, and Korean food. There are several reasons for this.
First, Filipinos historically migrated for work, not for culinary expansion. Unlike other cultures that aggressively exported restaurants globally, Filipino immigrants often worked in healthcare, shipping, engineering, and domestic services.
Second, Filipino food is humble food. It was never designed for elegant presentation. It was designed for feeding large families, fiestas, and communities. A pot of menudo or a tray of pancit may not look refined beside French cuisine, but its emotional power is enormous.
Third, Filipino cuisine does not easily fit modern food categories. It can be sweet, sour, salty, and savory all at once. Foreigners sometimes need time to appreciate dishes like bagoong, dinuguan, or balut. Yet once people understand the culture behind the food, appreciation often follows.
Today, however, the world is finally beginning to notice.
The Rise of Filipino Cuisine Worldwide
In recent years, Filipino food has gained global recognition. Filipino restaurants are appearing in New York, Los Angeles, Washington DC, London, Toronto, Sydney, and Dubai. Young Filipino-American chefs are proudly redefining their culinary heritage.
Ube has become an international sensation. Filipino desserts now appear in trendy cafes. Jollibee lines stretch around city blocks in America and Canada. Even mainstream supermarkets increasingly carry Filipino products.
The younger generation of Filipino-Americans is also rediscovering its roots through food. Children and grandchildren of immigrants who once preferred hamburgers and pizza are now proudly eating adobo, tocino, longganisa, and bibingka.
Food has become a bridge between generations.
Filipino Food and My Blogging Journey
Since beginning my blogging journey in 2009, many of my most meaningful memories involve food. I have written about family reunions, travels back to the Philippines, retirement reflections, and the immigrant experience in America. Again and again, Filipino cuisine appears at the center of these stories.
At birthday parties, there is pancit for long life. During Christmas gatherings, there is leche flan, hamon, queso de bola, and bibingka. At funerals and memorials, families still gather around shared meals. Food becomes comfort during grief and celebration during joy.
Even during difficult periods of my life, including my health struggles, Filipino food has remained emotionally significant. Certain flavors instantly reconnect me to childhood memories, to my parents, and to simpler times in the Philippines.
That is the true power of cuisine. It nourishes not only the body, but memory itself.
Why Filipino Cuisine Belongs in the Top Five
If world cuisine rankings are based only on Michelin stars and luxury dining, then perhaps Filipino cuisine will continue to be overlooked. But if rankings are based on emotional connection, diversity, family tradition, comfort, resilience, and cultural storytelling, Filipino cuisine deserves a place among the world’s greatest.
Italian cuisine gave the world pasta and pizza. Japanese cuisine gave elegance and precision. French cuisine elevated culinary artistry. But Filipino cuisine offers something equally valuable: warmth, hospitality, and humanity.
Filipino food does not try to impress you immediately. Instead, it invites you to sit down, stay longer, eat more, and become family.
And perhaps that is why so many Filipinos abroad continue searching for the taste of home no matter where life takes them.
For me, Filipino cuisine is not merely among the best cuisines in the world. It is home.
- The Symphony of Sweet, Sour, and Salty: Unlike many neighboring Southeast Asian cuisines that rely heavily on fiery chiles or fragrant herbs, Filipino flavor profiles masterfully balance asim (sourness), tamis (sweetness), and alat (saltiness).
- A Masterclass in Fusion: Centuries of indigenous traditions mixed with Spanish, Chinese, Malay, and American colonial histories have created an incredibly diverse post-colonial culinary landscape.
- Radical Hospitality: In Filipino culture, food is inseparable from community. The world is actively embracing traditions like Kamayan—a communal feast laid out on banana leaves eaten with bare hands—redefining what luxury dining can feel like.
- Adobo: The unofficial national dish of meat braised slowly in vinegar, soy sauce, garlic, and peppercorns.
- Sinigang: A deeply comforting, sour soup typically clarified and sharpened with tamarind or calamansi.
- Lechon: Whole-roasted pig with shatteringly crisp skin, famously praised by global culinary icons.
- Sisig: A sizzling, savory, and tangy chopped pork dish that perfectly pairs with drinks and gatherings.
- Ube-Infused Delicacies: The vibrant, naturally purple yam has taken the global pastry scene by storm, headlining dedicated cultural gatherings like the annual Ube Festival.
- Michelin Recognition: Restaurants like Hapag in Manila have earned Michelin stars by reinterpreting regional ingredients with sophisticated, modern techniques.
- Regional Representation: Culinary figures such as Chef Miguel Cabel Moreno are pushing underrepresented regional traditions, specifically from the Mindanao and ZamBaSulTa regions onto global menus.
- Cross-Cultural Collaborations: Contemporary pop-ups and concepts are constantly bridging gaps, including unique Peruvian-Filipino tasting menus that showcase shared historical roots.
Meanwhile, Here's My Photo of the Day: Great Grandson, Beau Joseph-Memorial Day Photo Shoot
Finally, The Beacon on top of Mt Diablo was lighted last night to honor our Veterans on Memorial Day. We light the Beacon on Memorial Day, Veterans Day, and Pearl Harbor Day to honor our veterans and those who have lost their lives in service to our country.


