
ASÚKAR, Garcia's business in Oakland, CA, resides inside Oakland Bloom's Open Test Kitchen (OTK), a nonprofit shared commercial kitchen and restaurant incubator program designed to meet immigrant chef participants where they are. Here, every dish tells a story about what it means to belong in multiple worlds at once.
Oakland Bloom supports immigrant chefs and chefs of color in launching and growing their food businesses. Each year, they provide hands-on assistance to a cohort of new chef-entrepreneurs through a blend of individualized coaching, peer community building in the Open Test Kitchen, and connections to a wider ecosystem of community partners. Their model works: in 2024 alone, Oakland Bloom facilitated $128,000 in sales for chefs in their programs and supported entrepreneurs in launching retail product lines, opening brick-and-mortar locations, and securing new catering opportunities. In 2025, they are working with 20 chefs and artisans who are using Oakland Bloom as their launchpad, and by October, these entrepreneurs had collectively earned over $120,000 in income through catered events and sales. After chefs graduate, Oakland Bloom continues to reduce barriers and build power through a community membership model that offers affordable kitchen and storage access, collaborative programming, shared decision-making, and opportunities to grow visibility and revenue together.
For immigrant chefs—many of them women of color, mothers, and sole breadwinners navigating language barriers and uncertain immigration status—opening a food business has always meant operating with razor-thin margins and outsized risk. In 2025, those risks became existential.
The Trump administration has made anti-immigrant policy central to its agenda. In July 2025, Congress passed the "One Big Beautiful Bill Act," injecting over $170 billion into immigration enforcement, dramatically expanding ICE operations across California. In just the first five months of 2025, over 3,000 people in the state were detained. Right in Oakland Bloom's backyard, the San Francisco ICE office is monitoring more immigrants than any other office in the country. This means that carrying out daily tasks now holds significant risk, regardless of your legal status.
For Oakland's immigrant chefs, this means fear of traveling to source ingredients from suppliers, hesitation to attend markets or pop-up events in unfamiliar areas, and the constant calculation of whether the business opportunity is worth the exposure.
Oakland Bloom's response isn't to pull back. It's to remain steadfast in offering what sanctuary actually looks like: a physical space to gather without fear. Economic infrastructure to build power. Community to create collective safety. A kitchen where immigrant chefs don't just survive but thrive and lead.
ASÚKAR began many years ago as a dream in one of Garcia’s notebooks. In 2020, when the COVID-19 pandemic forced an upheaval of normal life, she suddenly had time to play with this idea. She started doing weekly meal deliveries in her neighborhood, testing recipes, and building a following. When she began looking for commercial kitchen space to expand, she came across Oakland Bloom. "They made all the difference," Garcia says.

While Garcia always had talent and drive for her signature cooking, Oakland Bloom gave her the confidence and experience to bring it to life in a larger way. She left a stable career in the health food industry to pursue her restaurant business. "It is much more unpredictable," she admits, "but much more satisfying for my soul." Garcia is a proud Palestinian and is deliberate about calling her food what it is: "It's not Middle Eastern cuisine. What I make is Palestinian food and I refuse to call it anything else. Existence is resistance."
Owning her own food business lets Garcia live out her principles without censorship. She cannot separate food from politics and is committed to exposing the injustices faced by her people. But visibility comes with a price. Last July, Garcia faced a discouraging setback when her Instagram account with over 4,000 followers was suddenly cancelled with little explanation. Still, she remains anchored in her identity, finding purpose in showing up to run ASÚKAR. "Working during the past two years while there has been a genocide of my people has been especially painful and difficult, although it's also been healing in a way," she says. "I often apologize to customers if something is too spicy but tell them it's just my rage coming out in the food!"
This insistence on being seen, being whole, being both-and rather than either-or is what resistance looks like when it's served on a plate. Garcia's story is one of many immigrant chef stories that gets to thrive thanks to resources and opportunities she's gained at Oakland Bloom, alongside her own vision and drive.
Oakland Bloom has built a kitchen that operates by entirely different principles than the food industry usually follows. The Open Test Kitchen (OTK) is a chef-led, cooperatively managed space where the people doing the cooking make the decisions about the kitchen.
This is what it looks like when you flip the script: competition becomes cooperation, where chefs share knowledge, ideas, equipment, and customers, understanding that success isn't zero-sum. Exploitation transforms into dignity and collective flourishing through affordable kitchen space and shared leadership, where no one profits from someone else's desperation. Silos break down into community coalitions. The kitchen hosts Arab brunch fundraisers for mutual aid in Palestine, Lebanon, and Syria, mahjong and mooncakes for Mid-Autumn Festival, Sabores de mi Tierra dinner series for Latiné Heritage Month. This isn't networking, it's solidarity. These aren't aspirational values on a website. They're the operating system.
OTK is co-managed by anchor businesses Café con Cariño and ASÚKAR, alongside Oakland Bloom, which provides program support. Chef Garcia doesn't just rent space here, she helps run it. She shapes the policies, the culture, the vision. When decisions get made about this shared kitchen, they're rooted in lived experience, not in board meetings or from business consultants who've never worked a dinner rush.
Garcia dreams of having a small brick and mortar one day, and she also dreams about the liberation of Palestinians from Israeli occupation. "ASÚKAR is ultimately about liberation through food," she says.
When Chef Garcia plates her food she's not just feeding people. She's demonstrating what's possible when we stop asking immigrant entrepreneurs to compete for crumbs and start building tables big enough for everyone. Garcia wants to emphasize that Oakland Bloom is a really amazing resource and space, especially for motivated and self-driven chefs.
Chef Garcia’s success at ASÚKAR isn't separate from Oakland Bloom's mission. It's proof of concept. It's the theory made practice. It's what happens when immigrant chefs get access to affordable kitchen space, shared decision-making power, and a community that has their backs.
That's not just a nonprofit doing good work. That's a revolution with a really good menu!
About Oakland Bloom:
Oakland Bloom supports immigrant chefs and chefs of color in launching and growing their food businesses. Each year, they provide hands-on assistance to a cohort of new chef-entrepreneurs through a blend of individualized coaching, peer community building in the Open Test Kitchen, and connections to a wider ecosystem of community partners. Their model works: in 2024 alone, Oakland Bloom facilitated $128,000 in sales for chefs in their programs and supported entrepreneurs in launching retail product lines, opening brick-and-mortar locations, and securing new catering opportunities. In 2025, they are working with 20 chefs and artisans who are using Oakland Bloom as their launchpad, and by October, these entrepreneurs had collectively earned over $120,000 in income through catered events and sales. After chefs graduate, Oakland Bloom continues to reduce barriers and build power through a community membership model that offers affordable kitchen and storage access, collaborative programming, shared decision-making, and opportunities to grow visibility and revenue together.
Between November 25th and December 5th, World Centric is honored to match donations—up to $15,000 each—for three incredible nonprofit partners this Giving Tuesday: OAKLAND BLOOM, MIGRANT JUSTICE, and AMERICANS FOR IMMIGRANT JUSTICE working to ensure dignity and opportunity for the people who form the foundation of our food system. Together we can drive positive change for a better world. Learn More
Written by
World Centric
Read time
8 minutes
Published on
Nov 17, 2025
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