Family and Tradition: Are there any family recipes or culinary traditions passed down through generations that have found their way onto your menu? Can you share a story behind one?
The best example of this is our beloved dessert: Frituras de Calabaza. Over the 10 years Sophia and I have been together, I have heard Abuela Ella talk about “Frituras de Calabaza” SO many times.
They are always described as the most moving and heartwarming dessert that makes you stop in your tracks. I heard them described as crispy fried pumpkin fritters that had a fluffy interior and they had to be made with Calabaza. Other than that, I knew nothing about them or how her grandmother (sophia's great-great grandmother Adela) made them.
She told us that when she lived in Cuba she would go to school in the morning and go home for a few hours for lunch and would return to school for a few more hours. That was the schedule for her curriculum. When she would return home for lunch, her grandmother was known to be hovering over the stove frying frituras for an afternoon snack.
The house was warm with the smell of cooked pumpkin, and it put a smile on everyone's face and tummy. I made it a mission to recreate these as best as I could from hearing the stories of them. When I first fed them to Ella, it was a cold December day before we opened the restaurant. I cooked them up, covered them with a vegan Cajeta I made from Oat milk, dusted them with powdered sugar and added a sprinkle of espresso sea salt as an homage to Cuban cafecito.
She began tearing up and said they were a religious experience and it brought her back to her home in Cuba. It was one of the best moments of my life as a cook.