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Filipino Entrepreneurs

Season 1 Episode 104 | 27m 15s

PJ Quesada, explains Filipino cuisine while feasting at his friend Tim Luym's global-Filipino restaurant in San Mateo, Calif. Meet restaurateur Nicole Ponseca, who left her life as a advertising executive in New York to give voice to her culture through food. Meet the two friends behind Bling Bling Dumplings who manufacture thousands of dumplings to serve at Coachella and other festivals.

Aired: 05/15/15 | Expires: 05/15/27
Distributed nationally by American Public Television
Extras
Celebrate the life and career of Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Mary Oliver.
A Vermont couple finds new ways to better protect their land from drought and floods.
Soybeans may soon be part of the asphalt beneath you.
An Iowa farm thrives as one of the state’s few Black-owned farms.
A Georgia farm keeps the produce coming year-round by planting and harvesting in different locations
Preview: 250 Years of Americana
A California farmer shares easy-to-grow mushrooms with giftable box kits.
A Minnesota farm family plants a new kind of wheat that restores the soil and saves water.
See how college students are turning soybeans into new products like baby wipes.
A Montana rancher honors his ancestors, and Mother Earth, by restoring native grasses to his land.
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In Paris, pho, coffee, and bánh mì reveal a Vietnamese history beneath the surface.
In London, tea, spices, and peppers tell the story of the British Empire.
Berlin turns Asian food into art shaped by performance, craft, and creativity.
In Italy, Chinese and Italian cuisines collide and reveal a shared love of food and hospitality.
In Copenhagen, Asian chefs apply New Nordic seasonality to dishes shaped by their histories.
A lot of cities claim to never sleep, but Taipei makes good on that promise.
Across Taiwan, artisans produce staples like soy sauce, hot sauce, tofu & rice in hand-crafted ways.
Taiwan’s earthly obsession with food has a spiritual dimension as an offering to gods and ancestors.
Taiwan is steeped in tea, as a beverage, a ritual and a way of life.
All around the island, cooks find ways to reinvent and keep alive traditional Taiwanese dishes.