Monday, April 28, 2014

Yummy! Filipino dishes at 2014 state dinner welcoming President Obama to the Philippines

Which restaurant in Metro Manila can replicate this Obama dinner?

Here are the specially-prepared Filipino dishes served on April 28, 2014 at the state dinner hosted by President Noynoy Aquino welcoming U.S. President Barack Obama to Manila City, the Philippines:



The philstar.com is source of the image above: Tenderloin inasal and pili-crusted lapu-lapu were on the menu at the Philippine state dinner for U.S. President Barack Obama and 300 guests at Malacanang Palace.


This menu offers Filipino food, with most of the ingredients using local items.
The dishes include:
  • Lobster kilawin carpaccio, baby sprouts and fiddle fern with kalamansi jam (Kilawing ulang, pako at sarisaring talbos na may halayang kalamansi)
  • Seafood stew with river prawns, scallops and smoked mussels, sweet banana in rich tomato and coriander sauce (Pocherong lamang dagat na may suahe, scallops at tinapang tahong)
  • Red-dotted lapu-lapu with pili nut crust, pumpkin mash and local vegetables cooked in coconut milk (Lapu-lapu na may pili nut crust, nilupak na kalabasa at guinataang gulay)
  • Annato lemongrass marinated in US prime rib, pumpkin mash and Batangas farmed vegetables (US prime rib inasal, nilupak na kalabasa at samu't saring gulay mula sa Batangas)
  • Coconut lychee ice cream served with mango macapuno strudel (Buko lychee sorbetes na may mangga't macapunong napoleones)
  •  Coffee or tea

Saturday, April 19, 2014

Why pugon-baked pan de suelo so special in Kamuning Bakery since 1939?

Why the pugon-baked pan de suelo so special at Kamuning Bakery since 1939?


(Photo taken by phone camera of writer & pan de suelo admirer Wilson Lee Flores)



(Dr. Doreen G. Fernandez photo by Stella Kalaw, source is the website of the Ateneo de Manila University)

The late foremost food critic, book author, columnist and outstanding educator Professor Dr. Doreen Gamboa Fernandez, a suki or long-time loyal buyer of Kamuning Bakery’s pan de suelo, pan de sal and other pastries, wrote that the pan de sal is the bread of our history, at the core of Philippine culture, at the heart of our tastes. She particularly liked Kamuning Bakery’s pan de suelo which she described extensively in her 2000 book on Filipino cuisine entitled Palayok: Philippine Food Through Time, On Site, In the Pot.

National Artist for Literature N. V. M. Gonzalez called it “the bread of salt”, and wonders: “How did it get that name? From where did its flavor come; through what secret action of flour and yeast? … Why did the bread come nut-brown and the size of my little fist? And why did it have a pair of lips convulsed into a painful frown?”

Prof. Doreen Fernandez wrote: “Those lips, that frown, are what mark the old-fashioned pan de suelo, bread baked on the floor of the old-fashioned ovens and not on sheets, sent in and brought out on long flat wooden spades. For some mysterious reason, bread so baked develops a ridge, a crack, and thus is also called putok in the provinces. At the Kamuning Bakery in Cubao (43 Judge Jimenez Street corner K-1st Street, tel: 9292216, 7945045), the pan de suelo or pan de sal na putok still lives…”

After enumerating the many diverse breads and other pugon-baked pastries of circa 1939 Kamuning Bakery, Prof. Doreen Fernandez wrote: “But it is the pan de suelo that wins the customers and earns the bread (pardon the pun). Some 5,000 pieces are baked daily on ordinary days---the undisputed bestseller. Customers include children, mothers with babes in arms, housewives in slippers, career girls in high heels, distinguished old gentlemen (who come in chauffer-driven cars), young boys and errands, car-driving women buying multiples of 10-bun packs, once President Cory Aquino herself, not her usual a driver or maid.”

How to eat the pan de suelo in diverse ways

Fernandez added: “Eat it hot; eat it cold. Freeze it and take it to relatives in the U.S. (it keeps for months, even a year, it is rumoured). Halve it, hollow out the miga, fill and bake with olive oil and chorizo, and it is a Spanish breakfast. Tear it up and eat it with mouthfuls of tapa and itlog, or with menudo, and it is a Filipino breakfast. Butter it and have it with jam, and it is continental; or with ham and eggs, and it is American. Serve it hot with slices of jamon China and kesong puti, and it’s a party. It has even been known to contain ice-cream or bananas.”


National Artist for Literature N. V. M. Gonzalez


http://pcij.org/edsa20/images/cory-aquino2.jpg

(President Cory C. Aquino photo by Lilen Uy, source is Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism)


The respected 16-time Palanca literary award winner, novelist, poet and educator Butch Dalisay wrote in his Philippine Star column said of Kamuning Bakery’s pan de suelo: “Indeed it was all the crunchy goodness.”



Multi-awarded writer and educator Butch Dalisay

According to scholar and book author Felice Prudente Sta. Maria, there were two kinds of pan de sal that once reigned in the Filipino bread basket. The traditional and more respected of the pair was known as the pan de suelo.




Top scholar and book author Felice Prudente Sta. Maria

During the Spanish colonial era, dough was baked on the suelo or Spanish word for the “floor” of the pugon (wood-fire brick oven) thereby making crusts very crisp and hard which to according to National Artist for Literature Nick Joaquin “colegialas got their gums toughened on their segundo almuerzo in the morning and, with hot chocolate, their meriendas in the afternoon.”   


National Artist for Literature Nick Joaquin


Sunday, March 9, 2014

Why I think Kamuning Bakery is one of the Philippines' best bakeries. 

My favorite bakery is the traditional "pugon" or wood-fire brick oven bakery called Kamuning Bakery. It is iconic, historic and traditional. It was founded in 1939 as the first bakery in the then also newly-established Quezon City.

Some say it is the oldest pugon bakery in Metro Manila, even in the Philippines, but more than its durability, Kamuning Bakery upholds excellence, old-fashioned no-preservatives and no-additives baking, highest quality and good taste.

Kamuning Bakery has been in the same address for 75 years at Number 43 Judge Jimenez Street corner K-1st Street, Kamuning, Quezon City. If you're coming from Tomas Morato Avenue and you're in Kamuning Road, make a right turn after the Caltex gas station, that's Judge Jimenez Street already going to the bakery. If you're coming from EDSA highway and already at Kamuning Road, turn left at the first traffic light and that's already Judge Jimenez Street.



For orders of cakes and other inquiries, their telephone numbers  are 7945045, 9292216 (look for manager Libi or bakery staff) or text/call Rose 09228901892, Grace 09255877878, Office tels: 4126685, 4151692, 4112311, 3326066.  

penmanila.ph is the source of the image below




ABS CBN Publishing's "Food" magazine in its February-March 2014 issue ranked Kamuning Bakery as No. 3 among the 8 "most-loved Pinoy breads". That recognition even specifically cited Kamuning Bakery's pugon-baked pandesal for being delicious.

Also last year, ABS CBN Publishing's "Food" magazine conducted a blind taste test and chose the "5 Best Pandesal" which included Kamuning Bakery's pugon-baked pandesal.

I love Kamuning Bakery's blueberry cheesecake, pan de suelo and pandesal breads, biscocho, ensaymada, cinnamon rolls, Brazo de Mercedes, chocolate cake, otap, kababayan, pan de coco, and many other delicious pugon-baked pastries.




Disclosure: I had invested in Kamuning Bakery just before Christmas of December 2013, that's really how much I admire this old-fashioned and excellent bakery. However, the original owners---the Bonifacio-Javier family members---are still shareholders and helping maintain the old tastes & good family traditions there.

I highly recommend this Kamuning Bakery and hope you tell others also? :)



The image above of Kamuning Bakery's logo and popular traditional eggpie, this picture sourced from richric2003.blogspot.com


Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Banana Leaf Restaurant in Promenade, Greenhills, San Juan City, the Philippines is delicious and affordable

Yesterday on July 2, 2013,  I brought two USA-based guests---my cousin Joy Yang and his wife Beth---plus my younger sister Marilou Flores So to eat a late lunch at the Banana Leaf Asian Cafe at Promenade, Greenhills, San Juan City, Metro Manila, the Philippines.

The Southeast Asian foods were delicious, affordable and colorful. The restaurant staff and the officer-in-charge Clyde Yvan A. Mariano were quite friendly and efficient. The ambience is relaxing, comfortable, a bit casual and also elegant.

Congratulations to its owner and franchisee, the hardworking and dynamic San Juan City Vice-Mayor Francis Zamora for this good business you have there. Keep up the great work!

Vice-Mayor Zamora told me that his businesses like this resto is a franchise, so he could leave management behind and still earn recurring incomes, giving him the economic independence and time to focus on public service.

I first met Vice-Mayor Francis Zamora when I was a few years ago invited guest speaker at his Jaycees organization, where he was then the president. He used to be star player of De La Salle University's champion basketball team.

Note: I think the firs time I had eaten at a Banana Leaf resto was years ago at the newly-opened Podium Mall in Otigas Center, Mandaluyong City on a Tuesdy night and upon the invitation of SM Group and Podium Mall founder Henry Sy, Sr. We had a long five-hour conversation first at Figaro Cafe of Podium  and also later the jampacked Banana Leaf resto for dinner.

Banan Leaf Asian Cafe
Address: Greenhills Promenade G/L Greenhills Promenade Greenhills Shopping Center, Greenhills, San Juan ity, Metro Manila, the Philippines
Tel: (02) 706-3888 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting (02) 706-3888 FREE  end_of_the_skype_highlighting


I forgot to take my own pictures. The photos below sourced from bananaleaf.com










One of two desserts we ate, sweet and delicious!




The entrepreneurial owner and franchisee of the Promenade, Greenhills branch of Banana Leaf Asian Cafe, the dynamic San Juan City Vice-Mayor Francis Zamora.

The Tivoli at Mandarin Oriental, Manila in the Philippines has excellent foods!

I just had a splendid and satisfying dinner with five friends at the ever-reliable The Tivoli at Mandarin Oriental Hotel in Makati City, Metro Manila, the Philippines last night on July 2, 2013.

Review: This fine dining restaurant strategially-located right in the center of the Makati financial district is consistently excellent in high-quality Western-style foods, richly elegant and quiet ambience, the staff were attentive and very well-trained.

My advice, if ordering starters or appetizers, two persons can share one order. I ordered Sauteed duck foie gras, asparagus, mango and green papaya chutney, and the delightful plate was quite large and ideal for two people! It was delicious, but too much if only one person eating it. Delicious! P1,110 pesos per order.

I ordered Asparagus cream, salmon wanton and chives for hot soup; very good! P540 pesos.

The main course I ordered was the US beef tendeloin Rossini, potatoes salardaise, I requested medium rare cooking.  Delicious. P 2,230 pesos.

Along with main course of beef, I ordered red wine.

I and my friends ordered two more steaks which we all equally shared---the Australian Wagyu Blue Label Rib Eye grade 9+, it was very soft, tender and super delicious! Price is P6,000 pesos and not always available according to the resto staff. The other steak we shared was only one-third the price, but also delicious---Wisconsin beef.

Congratulations to the management of Mandarin Oriental Mamila, especially the Australian Director of Food and Beverage Peter Pysk (who is here at this hotel for only four months now), Director of Communications Charisse G. Chuidian and the French national Chef Remi Vercelli.



The Tivoli, Mandarin Oriental Manila
Address: Makati Avenue, Makati City, Metro Manila, The Philippines
Telephone: (632) 7508888
Facsimile (632) 8172472
Direct Facsimile (632) 8172330