Food mag’s version of halo-halo draws flak from Filipino netizens

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Bon Appétit's Ode To Halo-Halo. SCREENGRAB from Bon Appétit
‘Ode To Halo-Halo. SCREENGRAB from Bon Appetit

Would you dare to try halo-halo with ingredients such as gummy bears, popcorn and blueberries?

Bon Appétit, a popular food magazine, unveiled its take on the Philippines’ most celebrated chilled dessert. But it’s not the type of halo-halo someone would expect–it missed out its key ingredients in favor of American snacks.

“Our reimagined version plays off the original with store-bought toppings like coconut flakes and gummies. Macerating the fruit makes it extra juicy and saucy, but you could just throw in any unadulterated berry,” the description read.

Here are the ingredients of the mag’s “Ode to Halo-Halo”:

Filipino netizens singled out the magazine for its desecrated halo-halo creation. According to them, adding “irrelevant” bits to the Filipino summer refresher would miss out its authentic taste and unique culture.

“Bad takes on Filipino food hurt my soul. Like when halo-halo becomes movie theater floor garbage ice dessert,” one Twitter user lamented.

https://twitter.com/christina_jean/status/791713639082422272

https://twitter.com/MissDiLovely/status/791127291707420672

https://twitter.com/whaleesi/status/791440029130240000

The food magazine previously crowned Bad Saint, a Filipino restaurant in Washington, DC, as the second-best restaurant in its overly envied list.

This is the second time Bon Appétit was keenly scrutinized for “whitewashing” Asian delicacies. Recently, it released a short clip about pho, a Vietnamese noodle soup, which depicted a white chef demonstrating his viewers how to “properly” ingest pho. Many viewers decried it as “cultural appropriation,'” for which Bon Appétit apologized.  Gianna Francesca Catolico

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