In Person of Interest, we talk to the people catching our eye right now about what they’re doing, eating, reading, and loving. Next up is a pastry chef and fermentation specialist Jessica Wang, who sells healthful desserts to help fund her dream pickle shop.
Jessica Wang has her hands full with dynamic food projects. One day she’s slinging handmade butter mochi under the name Pique-Nique in Los Angeles’ Far East Plaza, the next she’s teaching pop-up workshops on freestyle fermentation at hot spots such as Honey Hi. Eventually, she hopes to use these various side hustles to fund her own brick-and-mortar pickle shop. She’s also been a recipe tester for Lucky Peach (R.I.P.), a buyer for the beloved pantry shop and grocer Cookbook Market, and a vintage cookware seller.
Checking out Wang’s varied creative projects, it may come as no surprise that she attended the Maryland Institute College of Art in Baltimore for fine arts. It was here that Wang—who was born in Texas but moved to L.A. when she was five—began working with food. Though Wang is not classically trained in the kitchen (beyond hovering over her mom while she made soy-braised chicken legs, gumbo, or casserole), she started cooking the food she grew up with as a cure for homesickness and eventually found her way into restaurant kitchens.
Since going fully freelance this October, Wang taps into her creative college experience through events that use food as a practical and poetic medium. The Los Angeles Department of Cultural Affairs asked her to teach a pickling workshop focused on techniques for storing food in case of an earthquake, and she even had an opportunity to help design fermentation vessels—sculptures that are meant to evolve as the active bacteria grows— currently on display at the MAK Center for Art and Architecture.
Recently, Wang’s main passions of pastry and pickles have been redefined by a new focus: her own well-being. After the now-35-year-old moved to San Francisco for a dream job on the pastry team of State Bird Provisions in 2014, doctors diagnosed her with prediabetes. Shocked and worried about what this would mean for her career, she returned home to decompress and heal.
“I can’t imagine not using that [pastry] skill set; it would be so sad if I stopped doing it completely,” she says. “When it comes down to how I feel I can contribute, I would really like to be useful and helpful [to others].” Since her diagnosis, she’s not only been reevaluating her relationship with sweets by finding creative swaps—using ingredients like protein-rich chickpea flour instead of all-purpose flour and sweet potato fillings instead of refined sugar—but using pickling workshops to help her peers learn about the benefits of probiotics in their diets.
We talked to Wang about the pastry trend that annoys her most, her obsession with obscure corn varieties, and the easiest way to get into fermentation.
I started taking pastry seriously… when I was working at LASA, a Filipino restaurant in Los Angeles’ Chinatown. I had done a pop-up with my friend where I made pastries with cornmeal and fillings like key lime, and I brought the leftovers into work. LASA didn’t have any dessert on their lunchtime menu at the time, so I reworked the recipes to fit more with Filipino flavors like coconut.
The name Pique-Nique comes from... when I was trying to be a good sport about the winters in college. It was quite an adjustment. In response to the gross winter, I created a roaming picnic in a gallery (and even once as a pop-up in the school elevator), with a curtain screen-printed with grass as an imaginary field of flowers.