Walk into a chop suey house in Chicago, Boston, or upstate New York, and somewhere on the laminated menu you’ll find subgum chow mein, subgum wonton, or just plain subgum. Order it and you’ll get a glossy stir-fry stuffed with chicken, shrimp, pork, water chestnuts, mushrooms, snow peas, bamboo shoots, and whatever else is around. It is the original kitchen-sink dish, and once upon a time it was everywhere.
Then it nearly disappeared. Understanding why says something about how American food fashion works, and what we lost when chop suey became uncool.
What subgum actually is
The word comes from the Cantonese sahp gam, meaning “ten varieties” or “mixed.” In practice, subgum referred less to a specific recipe than to a style: any dish prepared with an exuberant mix of meats and vegetables, usually in a light, slightly thickened sauce. By the 1920s, American Chinese restaurants had attached the prefix to almost everything. Subgum chow mein. Subgum chop suey. Subgum fried rice. Subgum egg foo young. The promise was abundance, a single plate that delivered three or four proteins and a small produce section. For Depression-era and postwar diners, that variety read as luxury. For restaurant operators, it was a clever way to use up odds and ends. Everyone won, and the dishes spread across thousands of menus in towns of every size.
Why it disappeared
The decline started in the 1970s, when American palates began chasing regional Chinese cuisines that hadn’t been Americanized. Sichuan, Hunan, and later Cantonese seafood and dim sum took over the prestige slots. Chop suey houses, once aspirational, became kitsch. Younger Chinese-American restaurateurs distanced themselves from the catch-all dishes their parents had served, partly because the food itself had been used to caricature them. Subgum, with its un-glamorous everything-bagel ethos, was an easy casualty. Food writers championed authenticity, which by definition excluded a dish invented for American tastes. Most new Chinese restaurants that opened after 1990 simply didn’t put subgum on the menu, and a generation of diners grew up never having heard the word.
Where you can still find it
Subgum survives in pockets, mostly in older Chinese-American restaurants that haven’t updated their menus since the Reagan administration, and a few gloriously preserved chop suey palaces. New England has a strong tradition; so does the upper Midwest. The signs are predictable: vinyl booths, paper placemats with the Chinese zodiac, lazy Susans, and a menu printed in two columns with American dishes on the left and Chinese characters on the right. Order subgum wonton there and you get a bowl that tastes like 1962 in the best possible way. It’s not authentic to anywhere in China, but it’s deeply authentic to a specific American immigrant moment, and that history is worth preserving even as the cuisine evolves elsewhere.
The takeaway
Subgum isn’t bad food that history corrected. It’s good food that fell out of fashion. If your town still has a chop suey house, go order the subgum chow mein before it closes for good. You’re eating a piece of vanishing Americana.
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