WEBVTT 00:00:01.129 --> 00:00:05.782 ♪ Cambodian music ♪ 00:00:22.064 --> 00:00:29.671 [DONUT PEOPLE] 00:00:30.493 --> 00:00:31.987 [Samoeurn Phan] 00:00:31.987 --> 00:00:35.256 [Affectionately known as Pou Sam (Uncle Sam)] 00:00:35.256 --> 00:00:39.040 [Sam has opened over 20 donut shops for Cambodian families across Houston.] 00:00:39.040 --> 00:00:41.969 (Uncle Sam) Well, when I came here in 1994 00:00:41.969 --> 00:00:47.056 to eat one donut you didn't realize how much work goes into one donut 00:00:47.997 --> 00:00:51.374 until you actually go into doing the donuts. 00:00:52.779 --> 00:00:57.446 You know, it takes quite a bit just to make one donut. 00:00:58.150 --> 00:01:00.648 I start off by finding a location. 00:01:00.648 --> 00:01:02.454 If I find a location, 00:01:02.454 --> 00:01:07.597 I get a family that needs a donut shop to go to look at the location, 00:01:07.597 --> 00:01:10.728 and if they like it, we negotiate the price, 00:01:11.191 --> 00:01:13.571 and if the price is right, I build it for them and turn them the key. 00:01:14.597 --> 00:01:17.664 You know, most of them already know how to make donuts. 00:01:17.664 --> 00:01:20.040 They work for a family member, 00:01:20.040 --> 00:01:23.652 you know, they've already worked for like two, three or five years 00:01:23.942 --> 00:01:27.133 to save up the money to start up the business. 00:01:27.903 --> 00:01:29.681 [Chandara Meas Owner of Snowflake Donuts, Galveston] 00:01:29.681 --> 00:01:32.562 [Cambodian Immigrant] 00:01:34.974 --> 00:01:37.243 (Chandara Meas) That's what I'm saying, when I came to the States, 00:01:37.243 --> 00:01:40.904 I don't have no relatives in here, I don't speak that much English, 00:01:40.904 --> 00:01:42.631 I gotta start to learn English 00:01:42.631 --> 00:01:44.671 and start to work to support myself... 00:01:45.451 --> 00:01:47.616 and I don't have chance to go back to college, 00:01:47.616 --> 00:01:50.668 so I end up at a donut shop. 00:01:50.668 --> 00:01:54.359 Most Cambodians who take us, 00:01:54.359 --> 00:01:57.706 they own a donut shop, they run a donut business... 00:01:59.399 --> 00:02:02.193 yeah, you know, it's hard to do it, 00:02:02.672 --> 00:02:05.745 not many people want to do that job as I'm doing right now. 00:02:07.029 --> 00:02:09.295 [Countless Cambodians were tortured] 00:02:09.295 --> 00:02:11.577 [and more than a million were killed] 00:02:11.577 --> 00:02:13.244 [under the brutal Khmer Rouge regime.] 00:02:13.244 --> 00:02:15.444 [More than a million Cambodians fled and became refugees.] 00:02:15.444 --> 00:02:17.778 From 1975 to 1979, 00:02:17.778 --> 00:02:19.446 there's Khmer Rouge ran by Pol Pot. 00:02:19.446 --> 00:02:22.279 At that time I was 10 years old... 00:02:22.279 --> 00:02:24.944 I still remember the torture, 00:02:24.944 --> 00:02:29.662 lot of people died by starving and sickness... 00:02:29.662 --> 00:02:33.129 most of [the time] they were killing people. 00:02:33.662 --> 00:02:34.928 That was a hard time 00:02:34.928 --> 00:02:39.195 and that was the worst thing that happened in the world. 00:02:39.861 --> 00:02:46.862 Most Cambodians escaped from the war in 1981after the Khmer Rouge regime, 00:02:46.862 --> 00:02:53.412 and when they started to come here, people don't speak that much English, 00:02:53.412 --> 00:02:57.711 so that's why they started working at donut shops 00:02:57.711 --> 00:03:00.312 because most of them what they do are family business -- 00:03:01.711 --> 00:03:03.529 This is my wife's nephew. 00:03:03.529 --> 00:03:06.295 He just came to the USA last year. 00:03:07.162 --> 00:03:10.329 He came in a special case that they call "Lottery Visa". 00:03:10.329 --> 00:03:13.462 He's a lucky one that won a lottery green card. 00:03:16.595 --> 00:03:21.812 The business we just opened-- it is kind of slow, it's brand new. 00:03:21.812 --> 00:03:27.245 Hopefully, we can stay for a long time until we get some profit... 00:03:27.245 --> 00:03:30.928 to take care of my family, my kids... 00:03:31.195 --> 00:03:32.878 go to school, go to college... 00:03:33.611 --> 00:03:36.079 I have a beautiful kid. 00:03:39.345 --> 00:03:42.477 It's like, if you work for a company, 00:03:42.477 --> 00:03:45.111 you have a different schedule than the donut people. 00:03:45.111 --> 00:03:49.261 So the donut people, we wake up at 2:00 or 3:00 am, 00:03:49.261 --> 00:03:53.628 and we'll be done by 12:00 or 1:00 pm, and take a couple-of-hours-nap, 00:03:53.628 --> 00:03:57.979 and, you know, get together and then, go to sleep, and wake up, 00:03:57.979 --> 00:04:00.329 and go to make some more donuts! 00:04:02.079 --> 00:04:07.261 (man singing Karaoke in Cambodian) 00:04:10.744 --> 00:04:13.561 line:1 [Tao Ngo Vietnamese Restaurant North Houston] 00:04:13.561 --> 00:04:16.727 line:1 [Cambodian Karaoke Party] 00:04:19.514 --> 00:04:22.839 line:1 (end of singing) 00:04:25.161 --> 00:04:28.246 Yeah, we like to get together because, you know, 00:04:28.246 --> 00:04:30.130 we work seven days a week. 00:04:30.363 --> 00:04:33.880 Some of us wake up at 1:00 am, 00:04:33.880 --> 00:04:34.879 some of us wake up at 2:00 am, 00:04:34.879 --> 00:04:36.929 some of us at 3:00 am, 00:04:38.412 --> 00:04:40.279 and we work seven days a week, 00:04:40.279 --> 00:04:43.546 you know, this is the only fun we have. 00:04:44.763 --> 00:04:48.613 (Cambodian music) 00:04:48.980 --> 00:04:54.396 I would say 95% of the donut shops in Texas, not just in Houston, 00:04:54.396 --> 00:04:56.896 in Texas is Cambodian people owned. 00:04:59.180 --> 00:05:01.229 One one-big -family, that's all. 00:05:01.928 --> 00:05:05.312 (Cambodian music) 00:05:34.863 --> 00:05:37.763 [Second Generation Donut Shop Owner] 00:05:38.330 --> 00:05:39.896 [Roth's parents, sisters, aunts,] 00:05:39.896 --> 00:05:41.280 [and uncles all own donut shops.] 00:05:41.280 --> 00:05:43.362 My parents bought the store in 1994. 00:05:43.662 --> 00:05:47.111 They would always bring us on weekends because we have school on weekdays. 00:05:47.111 --> 00:05:50.728 I really dread waking up on the weekend just to come make donut, you know. 00:05:51.812 --> 00:05:54.780 They told me one day I'm going to own my business 00:05:54.780 --> 00:05:57.330 and I kind of say I didn't want to do this. 00:05:57.330 --> 00:06:01.862 This is not my first choice of what I really wanted to do. 00:06:04.445 --> 00:06:07.646 For me, going to school what I really wanted to do, 00:06:07.646 --> 00:06:09.763 I wanted to experience that life. 00:06:10.145 --> 00:06:14.212 One day I woke up and I realized I didn't want to work for somebody else. 00:06:14.579 --> 00:06:16.912 I called my mom and I told her I wanted to come back home 00:06:16.912 --> 00:06:19.145 and try this again, 00:06:19.145 --> 00:06:21.596 and she was very excited, very happy for me 00:06:21.596 --> 00:06:25.362 that I can kind of woke up and I wanted to do this. 00:06:28.529 --> 00:06:30.993 I get up at 4:00 am, 00:06:30.993 --> 00:06:34.728 and my sisters get up at around 2 - 2:30 am, 00:06:34.728 --> 00:06:36.893 they're closer to the plant so they wake up earlier, 00:06:36.893 --> 00:06:41.330 to go to the plant and-- 00:06:41.330 --> 00:06:45.179 I'm fortunately to have a little bit of both, 00:06:45.179 --> 00:06:49.563 so I can stay in bed a little longer and they can-- 00:06:50.880 --> 00:06:53.213 So when I first got to Houston I didn't know-- 00:06:53.213 --> 00:06:56.796 I thought my family was the only one that was doing donuts 00:06:56.796 --> 00:06:58.896 but I come to find out that 00:06:58.896 --> 00:07:01.563 a lot of Cambodian people have done this way before we have... 00:07:01.846 --> 00:07:04.013 You know, it's like a community of helping out each other, you know, 00:07:04.013 --> 00:07:07.612 like, people were telling each other what can make you successful 00:07:07.612 --> 00:07:11.247 and I don't think anybody was envious of each other, 00:07:11.247 --> 00:07:14.295 just wanted to see our culture succeed, 00:07:14.295 --> 00:07:17.595 and the donut business is where it started 00:07:17.595 --> 00:07:20.279 for a lot of these Cambodian cultures. 00:07:20.745 --> 00:07:22.113 It's definitely a dream 00:07:22.113 --> 00:07:23.829 that a lot of people want when they are in Cambodia, 00:07:23.829 --> 00:07:28.030 to have their own place, back in Cambodia. 00:07:28.413 --> 00:07:30.713 It's a fast-pace life. 00:07:30.713 --> 00:07:32.694 Every day is a struggle to find money and food for the family. 00:07:32.694 --> 00:07:39.029 It made me realized what I have out here in America. 00:07:39.029 --> 00:07:40.330 As hard as I work down here, 00:07:40.330 --> 00:07:44.345 I think that they work harder over there to make a small living. 00:07:50.113 --> 00:07:51.812 My first place when I came, 00:07:51.812 --> 00:07:55.579 are the one along with Donald's Donut on el Dorado in Webster. 00:07:56.411 --> 00:07:59.462 Then I preach it out to Yankee Doodle Donuts. 00:08:00.596 --> 00:08:07.496 And that's when I met David on the El Dorado store. 00:08:07.796 --> 00:08:10.129 I was teaching him since he was young. 00:08:10.446 --> 00:08:14.879 I taught him probably about five years, I believe. 00:08:16.012 --> 00:08:16.929 [Houston coffee entrepreneur.] 00:08:16.929 --> 00:08:18.478 [Spent high school with Sam & Roth working in the Ouch family donut shop.] 00:08:18.478 --> 00:08:20.676 (David Buehrer) My name is David Buehrer and this is Morningstar. 00:08:22.112 --> 00:08:25.428 (Uncle Sam) Most of the time I don't ask for help, you know. 00:08:25.428 --> 00:08:27.812 It surprises me it came up from David 00:08:27.812 --> 00:08:32.346 just to ask me to get into a business partnership with him. 00:08:35.545 --> 00:08:37.596 (David B.) This is the first I'd learned with-- 00:08:37.596 --> 00:08:39.995 when I was in high school was how to roll kolaches 00:08:39.995 --> 00:08:43.379 line:1 and Sam's family they would let me roll a kolache 00:08:43.379 --> 00:08:46.313 line:1 and they would immediately unroll the kolache, 00:08:46.313 --> 00:08:48.779 and then they would roll it again to make sure it was perfect. 00:08:49.095 --> 00:08:52.411 And for like the first three or four months of me working there 00:08:52.411 --> 00:08:55.346 they never served any of my kolaches. (chuckles) 00:08:56.194 --> 00:08:59.846 One day they just saw one of them and decided it was okay, 00:08:59.846 --> 00:09:02.746 and from then on, they let me roll kolaches for them. 00:09:02.746 --> 00:09:03.513 But it took like months 00:09:03.513 --> 00:09:06.779 before they even serve one of the kolaches that I rolled. 00:09:06.779 --> 00:09:08.996 It shows the attention to details on level of quality 00:09:08.996 --> 00:09:10.894 and maybe, I just needed to learn more, 00:09:11.310 --> 00:09:14.329 but it took months to roll the kolaches with them. 00:09:15.963 --> 00:09:17.946 (David B.) One of the things we wanted to do with Morningtar 00:09:17.946 --> 00:09:22.496 is bring in the technique that we learned from the Cambodian donut shops 00:09:22.496 --> 00:09:26.777 and apply it to the foodie nature that specialty copy exists in. 00:09:27.095 --> 00:09:30.029 We have a lot of bartenders, and chefs, and sommelier friends, 00:09:30.029 --> 00:09:33.245 and a lot of our donuts are inspired by them. 00:09:34.412 --> 00:09:38.796 Yeah, at one point in high school I was driving at two in the morning 00:09:38.796 --> 00:09:42.446 to go and learn how to make donuts in Magnolia, Texas, with Sam. 00:09:42.446 --> 00:09:46.595 And then, an hour back, and then go to school by 7:30, so... 00:09:46.595 --> 00:09:49.795 but you do what you gotta do to learn. 00:09:50.113 --> 00:09:51.679 (Sam P.) In the nineties, you know, 00:09:51.679 --> 00:09:56.180 that's when the donuts started here in Houston by the Cambodian community 00:09:56.180 --> 00:10:00.479 to now is a long time to me... 00:10:00.479 --> 00:10:05.145 You feel like it needs change, it needs some time to change. 00:10:06.878 --> 00:10:08.829 (Sam P.) And then, all of a sudden one day, 00:10:08.829 --> 00:10:13.928 he called me pou, which is Cambodian for uncle, 00:10:14.595 --> 00:10:19.296 and said, "Would you like to do a donut shop and a coffee together?", 00:10:19.296 --> 00:10:23.479 I said, "Sure", but, you know, I never expected it. 00:10:26.012 --> 00:10:27.662 In the future, you know, 00:10:27.662 --> 00:10:31.729 the new generations they know that I own the store 00:10:31.729 --> 00:10:34.779 and they want to do something like this. 00:10:36.712 --> 00:10:39.979 I don't want to do the same thing every day, you know. 00:10:40.295 --> 00:10:44.196 Especially, because I've been doing it for almost 20 years. 00:10:44.829 --> 00:10:47.277 You're doing the same thing every day, 00:10:47.277 --> 00:10:52.929 and to me, I wouldn't want to go back and do the same shop 00:10:52.929 --> 00:10:54.778 like a mom-and-pop shop. 00:10:55.279 --> 00:10:59.963 This is the shop that I want to do as the next one... 00:10:59.963 --> 00:11:03.228 And the next one, and the next one... 00:11:05.446 --> 00:11:11.162 People have no idea what goes into a single donut here. 00:11:11.477 --> 00:11:14.112 English subtitles by Jenny Lam-Chowdhury