logo
Why the royal family is reluctant to reconcile with Meghan Markle despite Prince Harry peace talks

Why the royal family is reluctant to reconcile with Meghan Markle despite Prince Harry peace talks

New York Posta day ago
The British royal family is extremely reluctant to reconcile with Meghan Markle — despite being open for peace talks with Prince Harry, according to a new report.
Just weeks after the Duke of Sussex sent his aides to London to meet with King Charles' communications secretary, it emerged that the core of the royal rift hasn't changed.
According to insiders, trust — or lack thereof — remains at the heart of the yearslong family feud — and insiders believe that the 'Suits' alum is to blame.
4 The British royal family is extremely reluctant to reconcile with Meghan Markle, according to a new report.
Getty Images
'They just don't trust her,' a source told the Daily Express of the duchess, who is celebrating her 44th birthday Monday.
The insider alleged that while the Windsor clan is open to a resolution with the 'Spare' author, the same can't be said for their thoughts on the As Ever founder.
Per the report, the future of the family's dynamics may see Harry venture to and from the UK solo — meaning that his wife and their two children, Archie and Lilibet, will not join him.
The source alleged that the royal family's greatest fear is having any conversation they have with Markle become material for the next money-making venture she throws herself into.
4 According to insiders, lack of trust remains at the heart of the yearslong family feud.
Samir Hussein/WireImage
The Post has reached out to Buckingham Palace for comment.
It's no secret that the Sussex camp has been embroiled in an ongoing feud with the Windsor clan since quitting royal life in 2020 and moving across the pond.
Their royal exit was closely followed by several high-publicity projects such as their six-part Netflix documentary, their bombshell sit-down interview with Oprah Winfrey, and Harry's protocol-shattering memoir, 'Spare.'
4 The insider alleged that while the Windsor clan is open to a resolution with the 'Spare' author, the same can't be said for their thoughts on Markle.
Getty Images
In 'Spare,' which became the fastest-selling nonfiction book of all time following its release in January 2023, Harry left no stone unturned as he dished on all the family drama within the Firm.
Among the many eyebrow-raising revelations, the memoir details Harry's contentious relationships with his father and brother, Prince William, and the problems caused by his marriage to Markle that caused him to shut the door on royal life altogether.
They have only returned to the UK a few times since.
In the years that followed, the monarch, 76, has kept a stoic silence on top of a 5,459-mile-long distance from his estranged youngest son and his family.
However, in recent weeks Harry has noted he's serious about reconciling with his family members by offering to share his diary dates with the royal family to ensure total transparency.
4 The Sussexes shut the door on royal life in 2020 and moved across the pond.
Getty Images
What's more, the offer has reportedly been extended to the Prince and Princess of Wales, who have not spoken to the Sussexes in years.
Still, it's said that Charles is 'cautious and wary' of the Invictus Games founder's overdue attempt at gluing the family back together.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

How Erin Andrews, Charissa Thompson balance work and real-life relationships with NFL's biggest stars
How Erin Andrews, Charissa Thompson balance work and real-life relationships with NFL's biggest stars

New York Post

time12 minutes ago

  • New York Post

How Erin Andrews, Charissa Thompson balance work and real-life relationships with NFL's biggest stars

Fox Sports personalities Erin Andrews and Charissa Thompson lifted the lid on their close bond with the NFL's biggest stars following their offseason vacation with Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce and his girlfriend, Taylor Swift. During a fan Q&A on the latest installment of their 'Calm Down' podcast, Andrews and Thompson didn't hold back when asked how they balance being professional and having 'fan energy' while interviewing the league's megastars. 'I don't,' said Andrews, 47, who is Fox's lead sideline reporter and covered Super Bowl 2025 in February. 'I'm a huge fan of all the guys I cover and I get so excited to talk to them.' 7 Charissa Thompson and Erin Andrews covering Super Bowl LIX in New Orleans, as the 2025 game was aired on Fox on February 9. Instagram/Charissa Thompson Thompson, who hosts the 'Fox NFL Kickoff' show and 'Thursday Night Football' on Prime Video, agreed with Andrews. 'I still get really excited for whoever it is,' Thompson, 43, said. 'I remember [Buccaneers quarterback] Baker Mayfield has this crazy, crazy comeback and I totally turned into a fan and that was probably not professional, but I didn't care, that was f–king awesome. I'm a sports fan and dramatic finishes, and no matter who it is — next week, it could be the opposite in terms of who I'm rooting for. 'I like to watch good football and if something good happens for guys we root for and care about, then yeah, I don't care… There is a time and a place, but then you also still need to have the balance of professional cadence.' 7 CeeDee Lamb #88 of the Dallas Cowboys and Dak Prescott #4 of the Dallas Cowboys are interviewed by Erin Andrews after the game against the New York Giants at AT&T Stadium on November 12, 2023 in Arlington, Texas. Getty Images 7 Amazon Prime Video Thursday Night Football host Charissa Thompson on set during halftime between the Chiefs and the Raiders at GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium on November 29, 2024 in Kansas City, Missouri. Getty Images Andrews, who joined Fox in 2012 after a stint with ESPN, went on to explain that building relationships with the players comes with experience. 'Listen, it's taken us a minute to get where we are,' said Andrews, who is married to retired two-time Stanley Cup champion Jarret Stoll. 'You have to build up credibility… with not only with viewers at home, your bosses and also, the players and the coaches. You can't go into things when you first start with any job like, 'Oh my god!' People will look at you and be like,' You're an a–hole.' 7 (L-R) Charissa Thompson, Tony Gonzalez, Ryan Fitzpatrick, Andrew Whitworth, Richard Sherman on set of the TNF on Prime postgame show after a Seahawks-Bears game at Soldier Field on December 26, 2024 in Chicago, Illinois. Getty Images 7 Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes alongside Fox Sports sideline reporter Erin Andrews following a game against the Chicago Bears Sunday, Sept. 24, 2023, in Kansas City, Mo. AP 'But I think of certain times that I've interviewed Patrick [Mahomes] or I've interviewed Aaron [Rodgers] after big games or anybody really… I love this about Fox so much, I remember when I first got to Fox, somebody said, 'They want to see you having a good time and smiling.' And it's so true. '… There is nothing wrong with sitting on the [show] desk with Baker after an amazing game or any of these guys and be like, 'Can we just talk about this last play?' It's awesome.' Front Office Sports reported last month that Andrews and Thompson, whose respective contracts expired after the 2024-25 season, will receive lucrative extensions before the start of the next NFL campaign. 7 (L-R) Kylie Kelce, Erin Andrews, Charissa Thompson ,Travis kelce, Jarret Stoll and Steven Cundari at Taylor Swift's concert at Wembley Stadium in London in June 2024. Instagram Andrews and Thompson are open about their friendships with athletes, including Rodgers, who signed a one-year deal with the Steelers in June, as well as Rams quarterback Matthew Stafford and his wife, Kelly Stafford. Last month, Kelce posted Instagram photos from his and Swift's offseason getaway with Andrews, Stoll, Thompson and her longtime boyfriend, Steven Cundari. 7 Travis Kelce, Taylor Swift, Charissa Thompson, Steven Cundari, Jarret Stoll and Erina Andrews during an offseason getaway before the 2025 NFL campaign. Instagram/Travis Kelce Page Six reported in March that Kelce and Swift dined with Andrews during a secret getaway to Montana. Andrews and Thompson shipped a romance between Kelce and Swift, both 35, before the couple got together in the summer of 2023. During a previous episode of their 'Calm Down podcast, Andrews and Thompson publicly encouraged Swift to give the three-time Super Bowl winner a chance after he failed to pass along a friendship bracelet at a July 2023 Eras Tour show with his telephone number on it. Swift attended her first Chiefs game in September 2023 before stepping out publicly with Kelce a month later.

Ozzy Osbourne's cause of death revealed at age 76: report
Ozzy Osbourne's cause of death revealed at age 76: report

New York Post

time12 minutes ago

  • New York Post

Ozzy Osbourne's cause of death revealed at age 76: report

Ozzy Osbourne's cause of death has been revealed. The Black Sabbath frontman officially died at age 76 from cardiac arrest, acute myocardial infarction, coronary artery disease and Parkinson's disease on July 22, according to a death certificate obtained by The Sun on Tuesday. 13 Ozzy Osbourne during a performance in the UK on June 10, 2018. Shutterstock 13 Ozzy Osbourne during Season 3 of 'The Osbournes.' FilmMagic His family previously confirmed the news of his passing in a statement to The Post. They stated Osbourne died 'surrounded by love.' 'It is with more sadness than mere words can convey that we have to report that our beloved Ozzy Osbourne has passed away this morning,' they said. 'He was with his family and surrounded by love. We ask everyone to respect our family privacy at this time. Sharon, Jack, Kelly, Aimee and Louis.' 13 Ozzy Osbourne visits the SiriusXM Studios in NYC on December 11, 2014. Getty Images The heavy metal icon confirmed his Parkinson's diagnosis in 2020. Osbourne had also undergone multiple surgeries in recent years, including going under the knife for a debilitating spinal injury in 2019. Three years before his passing, Osbourne revealed just how he wanted to be remembered. The legendary rocker said 'survival is my legacy' during a 2022 interview with People. 'I mean, I'm 73. People go, 'Well, you're 70… why don't I throw the towel in?' Why should I? People still want to buy my records,' Osbourne told the outlet at the time. 'People still want to see me, so why should I? It motivates me to get off my backside and do something. I mean, if my career had gone down the toilet and I knew it was the end, I'd be pretty miserable.' 13 Sharon and Ozzy Osbourne pose for a picture as excited fans cheer in the background. Broadimage/Shutterstock Osbourne also noted what he wished to instill in others. 'Never give up,' he shared. 'If you've got a passion for something, you've got to find a way around it to carry on the passion.' In 2018, Osbourne got candid on his stature in the music industry, which included three Grammy wins and being inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame twice. He was inducted in 2006 with Black Sabbath and again as a solo artist in 2024. 'I'd like to be remembered for the work I did with Black Sabbath,' he told The Guardian. 'I'm so proud of the music. But to be honest, just being remembered would be an achievement to me.' 13 Ozzy Osbourne in Centenary Square, Birmingham on July 6, 2007. SWNS 'I come from Aston in Birmingham, y'know? I used to play on bomb sites,' he continued. 'There's a guy living in the house I grew up in, and they charge people £200 to sleep in the bedroom I had as a kid.' Osbourne had a troubling few years before his death. 'It's been five years of absolute hell for me and the family,' he confessed while on 'Piers Morgan Uncensored' in Sept. 2023. 13 Ozzy Osbourne performing in Moscow in August 1989. Getty Images 'My family has been so supportive,' Osbourne continued. 'I couldn't have done it without them. It's been really a bad scene.' The Prince of Darkness stated: 'I have Parkinson's — but I never think about it.' He was originally diagnosed in 2003, but kept it private for 17 years. Sharon, 72, Jack, 39, and Kelly, 40, were also in attendance during the interview. 13 Tony Iommi, Ozzy Osbourne, Geezer Butler and Bill Ward of Black Sabbath in 1970. WireImage 13 Geezer Butler, Bill Ward, Ozzy Osbourne and Tony Iommi of Black Sabbath in 2011. WireImage The producer told Morgan, 60, that the 'biggest misconception' about his dad's condition was that Parkinson's was his only health challenge. 'It's really the neck injury and the fall that he took,' Jack explained. In 2019, Osbourne fell and suffered a major neck injury that required surgery. He previously hurt his neck in 2000 during a bike crash. 'I just got up and carried on but I had broken my neck, and I carried on working with it until I had that fall, and then just everything came undone,' he recalled. 13 Ozzy Osbourne being interviewed about Black Sabbath's new album 'Sabotage' at Bronze Records offices in London in 1975. Redferns Sharon also spoke out about how her husband's health challenges affected her life. 'It changes your whole life,' she confessed. 'Suddenly you're off in another direction and your life changes so drastically. It's really hard. For the last five years, our life has changed dramatically.' 'But on the other hand,' Sharon noted, 'it's great that I've had Ozzy at home for five years. He's driving me crazy, but we've been together everyday for five years.' In 2023, Osbourne canceled his tour three months before it was scheduled to kick off due to health issues. 13 Black Sabbath fans pay tribute to Ozzy Osbourne in Birmingham, England on July 23, 2025. Getty Images 13 A fan lays flowers in Birmingham to commemorate the death of Ozzy Osbourne. AP At the time, he told Rolling Stone that he had 'at best, ten years left' to live. 'I don't fear dying,' Osbourne admitted. 'But I don't want to have a long, painful and miserable existence. I like the idea that if you have a terminal illness, you can go to a place in Switzerland and get it done quickly. I saw my father die of cancer.' Two weeks prior to his death, the musician took to the stage for one final show. He performed at Black Sabbath's 'Back to the Beginning' farewell concert in his hometown of Birmingham, England. 13 Ozzy Osbourne during a Black Sabbath concert in Los Angeles in 1974. Michael Ochs Archives Osbourne sang while sitting down in a black leather chair since he was unable to walk. The legendary hitmaker sang five songs solo, and was then accompanied by his former bandmates Tony Iommi, Bill Ward and Geezer Butler for four final Black Sabbath tunes. Following Osbourne's death, his former Black Sabbath bandmates shared a touching tribute to the late star. 'Ozzy Forever,' the British rockers wrote on Instagram, beneath a picture of Osbourne at their July 5 show. 13 Ozzy Osbourne at SiriusXM Studios on July 29, 2022, in Los Angeles, California. Getty Images for SiriusXM In a separate post, Iommi, 77, penned on X, 'I just can't believe it. My dear dear friend Ozzy has passed away only weeks after our show at Villa Park.' 'It's just such heartbreaking news that I can't really find the words,' he added, 'there won't ever be another like him. Geezer, Bill and myself have lost our brother.' 'My thoughts go out to Sharon and all the Osbourne family. Rest in Pease, Oz. Tony.'

Mexican Asian Fusion Is One of North America's Signature Cuisines
Mexican Asian Fusion Is One of North America's Signature Cuisines

Eater

time2 hours ago

  • Eater

Mexican Asian Fusion Is One of North America's Signature Cuisines

In early 2009 in Los Angeles, there was no food experience more exciting than Roy Choi's Kogi truck. You'd wait in a long line in a dimly lit parking lot with a menagerie of trendy people, some of them drawn by the truck's latest Twitter post or Jonathan Gold's review in LA Weekly, others stumbling out of a nearby bar. Then you'd order too many tacos and stand next to your car to eat, perching your sagging paper trays of Korean Mexican fusion on the trunk. The truck felt new and surprising, and the big flavors demanded attention. The cheese oozing out the sides of the kimchi quesadilla rounded out the fermentation, while the salsa roja on top amplified the gochugaru. The blend of Korean and Mexican chiles in the salsa coaxed complementary flavors out of the punchy marinade on the kalbi. Funky one-off specials, like pork belly tteokbokki or the Kogi Hogi torta, constantly introduced new combinations. Leaning on the strengths of Mexican and Korean cuisines, Kogi probably would have worked if the food was only a novelty. But it also tasted definitively of Los Angeles. Choi (and his partner, Philippines-born, California-raised chef Mark Manguera) put many facets of his life into Kogi, including his training in fine dining, his rebellious spirit, and his Korean heritage, but most of all his experience growing up in LA, where Koreatown abuts several predominantly Mexican American neighborhoods. Choi's cooking prioritized innovation, but it still smacked of home. 'I think it became a voice for a certain part of Los Angeles and a certain part of immigration and a certain part of life that wasn't really out there in the universe. We all knew it, and we all grew up with it, and it was all around us, but the taco kind of pulled it together,' Choi told Terry Gross in a 2013 interview on Fresh Air. 'It was like a lint roller. It just kind of put everything onto one thing. And then when you ate it, it all of a sudden made sense, you know?' Kogi, parked in Venice, California, in 2010. Ted Soqui / Corbis / Getty Images Choi tapped into culinary histories that run deep in the American Southwest and California, where immigrants coming north from Mexico built lives alongside immigrants crossing the Pacific from Asia. (Kogi wasn't the first in the U.S. to serve food at this cultural intersection; spots like Avatar's, which has been serving Punjabi burritos in the Bay Area since 1989, are notable precursors.) But the truck marked a turning point for Mexican Asian fusion as an enduring cultural passion among interconnected communities. Over the last 16 years, Korean Mexican fusion has spread all over the country; in Portland, Oregon, and Austin, Texas, bulgogi burritos now seem as natural as coffee and chili, respectively. A legion of chefs have also popularized all kinds of Asian Mexican fusion, serving birria ramen, halal carne asada, and furikake esquites. Years before the term 'chaos cooking' entered the conversation, these restaurants created cuisine that was fun and different, blending foods from distinct cultures in ways that make emotional sense, even when they sound far out on paper. And chefs keep finding new ways to capture how Mexican and Asian foods crisscross in the U.S. and in diners' hearts. Asian immigrants have been forming communities in Mexico, from the La Chinesca neighborhood of Mexicali to Mexico City's Pequeño Seúl, for decades or in some cases centuries. Chefs in these areas naturally adapted their cuisines to local ingredients and dishes; in the process, they started unpacking some of the natural affinities across cuisines that would grease the wheels of fusion projects well into the future. To Cesar Hernandez, associate restaurant critic at the San Francisco Chronicle and a street food aficionado, it makes sense that items like tacos and burritos became go-to formats for fusion cooking over the years. 'They truly are blank canvases for whatever. They play well with other flavors,' he says. Hernandez also points to the common ingredients that unite Asian and Mexican cuisines. 'A lot of these cuisines love citrus. A lot of these cuisines love chiles. And when you can coax those flavors out with the other cuisines, that's when it really works.' For Rhea Patel Michel of Mexican Indian fusion restaurant Saucy Chick in Pasadena, California, the connection between these foodways is elemental. Her background is Gujarati Indian, and her husband Marcel Rene Michel is Mexican American. In combining their cuisines, they found a natural synergy in ingredients like cumin, citrus, rice, and legumes, but they also discovered a connectivity of spirit. 'It's generous, it's vibrant, it's dynamic, and we were really energized by what it could look like,' to bring their food together, Patel Michel says. The Picoso Roll at the Sushi-lito food truck in Tucson. Nick Oza/Eater When chefs in historic Asian communities in Mexico couldn't get access to ingredients from back home, they often developed fusion dishes out of necessity. But the clearest progenitor for many contemporary projects might be Sinaloan sushi, created in Culiacán, Mexico, not out of necessity but creative conversation within the restaurant community. Japanese immigrants to the area, in Mexico's Sinaloa state, started opening sushi restaurants around the late 1980s, often hiring Mexican chefs. But it wasn't until those chefs left to open their own spots, bringing their own ideas and style to sushi — and building on recent sushi inventions from the north, like the California roll — that the genre really developed its modern personality. One foundational operation, Sushi-Lo, brought sushi out to the streets in a cart, and introduced the modern classic, deep-fried mar y tierra (surf and turf) roll filled with carne asada and shrimp. Today, Sinaloan spots both in Mexico and the U.S., like Culichi Town, tend towards extravagance, incorporating aguachile, plantain, beans, melted cheese, jalapeños, or Hot Cheeto dust. And the cuisine only went further when it jumped from Sinaloa to neighboring Sonoroa, edging its way toward the U.S. 'Sonoran-style specialists are more like sushi bars attached to a Wingstop,' writes Bill Esparza, 'with menus touting fried chicken wings and fried potatoes covered in melted cheese alongside the calorie-rich sushi.' Alongside Culichi Town — which has 12 locations in the U.S., including in Dallas and Las Vegas — Sonoran sushi can be found all over the American West, but it especially thrives in Tucson, alongside terroir-defying, cross-cultural icons like the bacon-wrapped Sonoran dog. Unlike contemporary fusion restaurants of the '80s and '90s that became reviled for carelessly throwing together half-assed hybrid dishes and wearing culture as costume, the impetus for Sinaloan and Sonoran sushi wasn't colonial. Even as chefs tended toward monchoso, a sort of thrilling overindulgence, their fusion remained rooted in mutual respect and open collaboration. Neither culture was being absorbed or assimilated, trod on or lifted over the other. 'Mexican food is not fucking precious,' Hernandez says. 'People in Mexico are the first to break the rules. It's part of the tradition.' Roy Choi at work at his latest project, Taco Por Vida, in 2024. Rebecca Roland/Eater That spirit has persisted in Kogi and the projects that followed, even as restaurants spread beyond the Southwest, more Asian cuisines entered the conversation, and chefs developed all kinds of fusion. Almost immediately following Choi's success, chef Bo Kwon created Koi Fusion in Portland, Oregon, in 2009, bringing Pacific Northwest style, a lighter touch on sauces, and an eye for local vegetables to the cuisine. In 2010, Señor Sisig launched as a Filipino Mexican food truck with sisig burritos and tacos, citing Kogi as major inspiration. That same year, the Korilla food truck in New York pushed rice bowls alongside tacos and burritos, drawing winding lines and mostly stellar reviews. Along the way through the many mid-2010s pivots at Mission Cantina in New York, chef Danny Bowien served Mexican kimchi, avocado sashimi, and a Chinese burrito special featuring mapo tofu or kung pao pastrami. More recently, Taqueria Azteca in New York rolled out phở birria, Phở Vy in Oakland, California, unveiled bò kho quesabirria tacos, and Baysian in nearby San Leandro whipped up Filipino queso-adobo. Back in LA, Holy Basil offers Thai-style prawn aguachile, while New York-born Baar Baar serves birria-influenced tacos with Kashmiri duck and tostadas with tuna bhel. Hernandez is especially excited about chef Sincere Justice's Tacos Sincero pop-up, born in Oakland in 2022. The chef draws on his experience growing up in LA's San Gabriel Valley (which has large Mexican and Asian American populations) to create eclectic dishes like a konbini-style egg salad tostada, calamansi tinga, and a saag burrito. '[Justice is] a real student of 'I want to try different shit and present it in these formats,' using tortillas and tostadas,' Hernandez says. 'He and a couple other folks are keeping that [multicultural cooking] alive.' All of it is constantly evolving, even within individual restaurants. At Saucy Chick, the Michels are always creating new dishes, like birria de chivo that incorporates masala spices, halal carne asada marinated in amchur and coriander, and esquites amped up with fenugreek and turmeric. Along the way, something surprising has happened during all this R and D. '[I've been] digging deep with my mom and my dad, [asking,] 'How do we make this dal?' or 'How do we make aloo?'' Rhea says. 'I've found myself getting even closer to my culture.' 'Kogi came at that right moment,' Choi told Mashed in 2020. In the midst of the Great Recession, the truck offered accessible, boundary-pushing cooking. 'People couldn't afford to go out all the time. People were struggling, lost their jobs, looking for what their next meal could be. And then this funny little beat-up truck came along, serving this delicious little taco.' The team's creativity and hustle helped them nail the tenor of the early social media era. During Twitter's ascendance, the Kogi team tweeted their locations and specials in real time as the truck rolled around town, drawing mobs of fans wherever they went. 'It felt like a scavenger hunt when we needed some sort of positive direction,' Choi told Mashed. Online appeal has remained an important piece of Mexican Asian fusion, clear in dishes like birria ramen (or 'birriamen'). Generally said to have been invented by chef Antonio de Livier at the Mexico City restaurant Animo, birriamen builds on the internet popularity of the Tijuana-style stewed beef dish. It might be made with instant noodles or higher-grade stuff, ramen broth or consomé, stuffed into tacos or piled onto vampiros — but in almost every case, it's big and bold and attention-grabbing, making it ideal for social media feeds. Aguachile at Holy Basil in LA Wonho Frank Lee/Eater But in other ways, Mexican Asian fusion no longer resembles Kogi's scrappy street food operation, especially when it starts climbing into fine dining territory. At Michelin-starred Los Félix in Miami, the tétela is filled with Japanese sweet potato, the esquites get a hit of basil furikake, there's miso-grilled corn with fish, and corn dumplings come with scallions and trout roe. Anajak Thai Cuisine's Thai Taco Tuesday, a pandemic-born lark, grew into a signature experience; dishes like a carnitas taco and a sashimi-style yellowtail tostada with nam jim-salsa negra marisquera topped with papaya salad powered the restaurant to national acclaim. Today, fusion dishes show up at restaurants that are nominally neither Mexican nor Asian. Birria dumplings appear on the ever-changing menu at San Francisco icon State Bird Provisions, while Chicago restaurant Mfk serves suzuki crudo on a tostada with both guacamole and sambal. This cuisine is everywhere now. It's not uncommon to see culinary combinations at an airport, the Taco Bell Test Kitchen, or floating up beneath the gaze of social media's Eye of Sauron. It has been in the mainstream for more than 20 years, practically forever in the modern food era, fully engrained into the way we eat. Alongside other types of third-culture cooking, Mexican Asian cuisine has largely shed the stigma that fusion picked up in the '90s. Chefs once chafed if their food was labeled fusion. Now, the pendulum has largely swung back. For Hernandez, it's a generational thing; the old distaste has fallen by the wayside as new chefs and new diners have come into maturity. 'Fusion' is just a convenient shorthand for what so many are doing: transforming culinary building blocks, wherever they come from, to create something new — and awesome — from the parts. Hernandez brings it back to a conversation with Justice of Tacos Sincero. As much as the chef's food reflects his upbringing, the specific labels just aren't important anymore. 'Whatever people want to call it, it doesn't matter,' Hernandez says. 'It just has to bang.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store