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Showing posts with label baguio. Show all posts
Showing posts with label baguio. Show all posts

23 April 2013

Baguio: World Food Expo Northern Luzon




For the third year, the World Food Expo Northern Luzon will be held in Baguio.

This time, WOFEX will be held at the Baguio Country Club.  From May 2 to 4, 2013, be sure to visit the best annual food expo in the region. WOFEX provides excellent opportunities to source, network and learn from the many products on display and the different seminars and cooking demos... all for free! 



24 June 2008

Jetsetting Foodistas | Baguio: Wanderings in the Summer Capital

JoeyJoey's Wanderings in the Summer Capital
Jetsetting Foodistas: A Travelogue by Joey
Part 2 of 2: Cafe by the Ruins, Forest House & Choco-laté de Batirol



My second day in Baguio was spent on a mini quasi-tour of the city. Our first stop was Café by the Ruins (23 Chuntug Street, Baguio City), a coffee shop that my auntie's friend told her about. We were all curious about what ruins the cafe claims to be by.

Café by the Ruins is located near Rizal Park and city hall. It claims to be a meeting place and the venue of many canaos (rituals to please the gods), as well as poetry readings, art exhibits and dance performances. The ruins they speak of are apparently the remains of the home of Phelps Whitmarsh, the first governor of Baguio.

Their menu boasts of a selection with ingredients natural and local to the region. Much as we would have wanted to try their food, we were all still full from breakfast. But since it's a café after all and the highlight of their menu is their beverage offerings, we ordered two cups of Ruins Coffee (their specialty, said our server, Nestor), a cup of Rizal's Tsokolate-eh and a pot of salabat (native ginger tea).

While waiting for our orders to arrive, I gazed around to appreciate our surroundings. The café had a very warm, serene ambiance and even its furnishings boasted of the style of the region. Even their tissue holder had a lot of character.

Ruins coffee is described to be "filtered with cardamom, topped with whipped cream, mozcovado sugar and cinnamon powder." My cousin and I noticed a twig-like thing that came with the coffee, and my mum, seeing it, exclaimed, "Tira-tira! These were what ruined my teeth as a child, haha!"

Tira-tira was one of my mum's favourite snacks as a kid. It's very hard and very sweet. It's basically caramelized sugar candy, kind of like a candy cane only, in my opinion, much better. My mum said they used to sell these when she was younger. (Do they still now?)

My cousin had the Tsokolate-eh, which seemed a bit more like tsokolate-ah, since it wasn't as thick as we expected it to be. The salabat I had was, of course, very spicy and refreshing, like good ginger tea ought to be. It came with a small glass of honey, if you want to have a little more sweetness in your tea.

Cafe by the Ruins really has a certain charm to it. It's too bad I wasn't able to try their other offerings, but it gives me a reason to come back, doesn't it? :) This place is great place to pop by for a nice hot cup of tea, coffee or chocolate (or all three?), especially on a particularly chilly day.

Cafe by the RuinsCafe by the RuinsCafe by the RuinsCafe by the RuinsCafe by the RuinsCafe by the Ruins

Our next stop was the Lourdes Grotto on Mirador Hill to climb the 252 steps to the shrine of the Lady of Lourdes. The grotto is one of Baguio's main tourist spots, with many devotees and, well, tourists climbing the steps either as an act of sacrifice/devotion, or just to say that they have.

After stopping by Easter Weaving Room, we were ready for lunch. I had a list of restaurants to try, but a friend of my mum's (my mum was born and raised in Baguio) recommended Forest House Bistro & Cafe to us. Forest House is a quaint restaurant along Loakan Road, near Camp John Hay. Entering it feels like entering someone's cozy country home, with the furnishings and homey ambience.

We ordered their sari-saring inihaw from the Our Family Feast section of their menu, which consisted of grilled pork belly, squid and tilapia, farmers salad, garlic and tofu soup, and steamed rice good for four. We also ordered one of their specialties, the Forest House homemade bagnet (crispy fried pork belly with papaya chutney).

Although a rather simple lunch, everything was perfectly cooked, from the steamed vegetables to the grilled food. I especially liked the grilled pork, which was very flavourful without being too heavy. The garlic and tofu soup looked unassuming but was quite salty.

Bagnet is one the signature dishes of the Ilocos region. Deemed the "Ilocano Chicharon", bagnet is one of the key things I remember most from our trip to Vigan ages ago. It's crispy, though not as crunchy or light as your regular chicharon. The Forest House bagnet was a bit like crispy pata bites for me, probably because of the sauce it was sitting it. Not to say that it wasn't good, which it was. Mmm cholesterol :9

Forest HouseForest HouseForest HouseForest HouseForest HouseForest House

We were tempted to try one of their cakes for dessert, but I remembered one of my favourite places in Baguio: Choco-laté de Batirol.

I cannot say just how much I adore this place enough. Whenever we head up to Baguio, it is imperative(!) that I have a mug of chocolate de batirol before our return to Manila. They also have a branch in Serendra, but there's nothing quite like drinking piping hot chocolate de batirol in cool Baguio weather.

For those of you not yet familiar with what exactly it is, I'm going to cheat a little and provide you an excerpt from my own blog from almost a year back:
Chocolate de Batirol is just about the best thing you can have when you're cold. It's a very thick, sweet, rich chocolate drink made from tablea, which are chunks of blended cacao and ground peanuts, which give it its trademark gritty texture and hints of nuttiness. You can get them either sweetened or unsweetened at supermarkets and in the palengke (wet market). I particularly love the ones from the palengke, since the texture from their tablea are thicker and grittier — yum!

If you have read Noli Me Tangere (Rizal), I'm sure you still remember the Chocolate eh! and Chocolate ah! If you're visiting someone and your host requests their help to make you some Chocolate eh!, it means that they like you. If they request for Chocolate ah! to be prepared, then it means quite the opposite. As I'm sure you can deduce, Chocolate eh! is the preferred preparation. It is thick, rich and sweet while Chocolate ah! is much more watery. That was back during the time of the Spanish Colonization. I don't think anyone still has Chocolate eh! (or ah!, for that matter) prepared for their guests anymore. That's a pity :(

You prepare it by taking a cup of evaporated milk (or regular or low-fat milk for those of you who don't wish to be that sinful :P) for every 1-2 tablea you use. Once you've mixed the paste (tablea + milk), you pour it into a mixing bowl (or a traditional tsokolateria), add some hot water, and then whip it into a foam using the batidor by rubbing your hands together with the batidor between them (thus rolling the batidor!). Of course, if you don't have a batidor, you can use a whisk or a fork -- but you won't get it all nice and foamy (that's okay tho; will still taste v. good).
We wanted some of their always delicious bibingka to snack on, but it was late in the afternoon already and they had a great many customers by then, a good lot of whom apparently also had the same freshly cooked bibingka-craving. Instead, I ordered us a plate of suman sa lihia, which came to us still steaming.

Suffice to say, it was "¡Muy delicioso!" The suman was very soft and sticky, topped with a generous amount of coconut and sugar. When you go and try this out for yourself, try and dip a bite of the suman in your chocolate de batirol — a little piece of heaven, right there. All in all, it was the perfect late afternoon snack combination.

Choco-laté de BatirolChoco-laté de BatirolChoco-laté de BatirolChoco-laté de BatirolChoco-laté de BatirolChoco-laté de Batirol

After yet another round of bumper cars and an hour of roller skating, we went back home to our cottage for more mahjong. Unfortunately, I have no restaurant to feature for our dinner meal, since we prepared it ourselves. But, as much as dining out and trying out new and interesting food stuffs and places, it's still a good, hot home-cooked meal I most look forward to any day. ♥

Thus I conclude my two-part Baguio travelogue. It's not quite over yet though. Watch out for the review of Isdaan, the Halfway to the North Floating Resto-Park, to be posted soon :)


Joey in Baguio
Baguio 08: Day2Baguio 08: Day2Baguio 08: Day2Baguio 08: Day2Baguio 08: Day2Baguio 08: Day2


See many more photos of my Baguio trip on my flickr.

21 June 2008

Jetsetting Foodistas | Baguio: The Comforting and Familiar

JoeyJoey's Wanderings in the Summer Capital
Jetsetting Foodistas: A Travelogue by Joey
Part 1 of 2: Dencio's & Hamada



My latest Baguio trip was more food-centric than a good soak in culture, so unlike with my Thailand travelogue, I'll skimp on the general trip narrative and dive straight on to the food. And other than thoroughly enjoying all the good food, this visit made me remember and miss being a little kid again.

There are three things I look forward to most when going to Baguio: horseback riding, relaxing to the cool weather and the great food to be had. And there is one place where we always have our first Baguio meal whenever we go on a trip to the Philippines' Summer Capital: Star Café.

Star Café is a hole-in-the-wall Chinese restaurant along Session Road (on your right side, if you're facing downhill) that serves really good and really cheap food. It may be a relatively small place, but it's familiar interiors and the scent of all that lovely, savoury Chinese food trigger a warming "Welcome to Baguio, Joey!" in my mind every time.

Unfortunately, our quasi-family tradition was thwarted by horrible Session Road traffic, so, at my uncle's suggestion, we headed for Mile Hi at Camp John Hay for our first Baguio Trip 2008 meal.

While my adventurous rank sinks from heading for the familiar instead of venturing out and trying something new, I'd have to say that you'd be hard-pressed to find someone who doesn't come out completely satisfied (and feeling a little guilty) after dining in Dencio's.

If there's one dish you cannot miss out on when eating Dencio's, I would have to say it's their sisig. The thing I love most about their sisig is the texture. Most sisig I've had in the past wasn't all that interesting, texture-wise, since most of it is soft. Dencio's sisig has a crunch and a crisp to it, which makes all the difference to me. It also seems to taste better than most sisig I've had, but that could be just me.

Since we were a relatively big group, we ordered their Set C, which consists of Barbeque Chicken (good, but nothing to go crazy over), Sizzling Tiyan ng Bangus (Sizzling Milkfish Belly; delicious :9), Chop suey, Kare-kare (Philippine peanut sauce-based stew; my brother's favourite), rice, iced tea, and, of course, their sisig.

Dencio's, Camp John HayDencio's, Camp John HayDencio's, Camp John HayDencio's, Camp John Hay

After that incredibly satisfying, not so heart-friendly lunch and resting for a bit, we spent the rest of the afternoon horseback riding, wandering around the Butterfly Garden in Camp John Hay (worth a visit, if only to talk to Mang Loloy, who mans the place), a few rounds of bumper cars, revisiting our childhood at the playground, then heading back to our cottage for a few rounds of Pictionary whilst snacking on a bag of Cheetos.

And like how we always have our first Baguio meal at Star Café (except just this once), we always have to have dinner at Baguio Country Club's Hamada teppanyaki table, of course.

Hamada was named one of the Philippine Tatler's Best Restaurants of 2007. It's easily one of my favourite Japanese restaurants, if only because having a teppanyaki chef prepare our food in front of me tickles me. There's just something rather fascinating and fun about teppanyaki tables that makes me feel like a little girl again.

[ Funny little side note though: Hamada now has a dress code. That wasn't there the last time we dined there; granted, it's been so long since our last visit. They're particular about no slippers (I'm guessing it's because of that Havaianas fad that I never understood) and no 'hip hop' clothes (this made me giggle and go "YES!" at the same time). ]

We started our meal with a few plates of California maki and shake (salmon) sashimi. I'm actually not fond of California maki, since it's, more often than not, full of mayo (which I am not very fond of either). I enjoyed these ones served by Hamada, however, since they went light on the mayo and you can tell that they used fresh, quality ingredients (I've had my fair share of not that great sushi, yes). As for the sashimi, I think "I adore salmon." pretty much sums up what I thought about it, haha.Hamada

Our teppanyaki chef came about the same time as our orders of tempura. He introduced himself as Joel and proceeded to do a few fancy tricks with his cooking utensils. After cleaning his "workspace", he proceeded to crack open and fry more than a few eggs for our fried rice.

I don't think I can ever get tired of teppanyaki table dining. Not only do you see how your food is prepared, but there's just something a bit fascinating with the way they cook it. Along with our yummy fried rice, we had some mixed vegetables and beef tenderloin and chicken teppanyaki. Everything, of course, was perfectly cooked: the meat very tender and the vegetables crisp and flavourful.

The last time we were at Hamada, my cousins and I were able to try their teppanyaki ice cream. So this time, we decided to order a plate of their tempura ice cream. It was essentially vanilla ice cream covered with tempura batter and fried, drizzled with chocolate syrup and topped with a maraschino cherry. It was a bit much for me, but my cousin liked it, saying that it reminded her of the Wicked Oreos (Oreos covered in batter and fried, served with ice cream and chocolate syrup).

HamadaHamadaHamadaHamadaHamadaHamadaHamadaHamadaHamadaHamadaHamadaHamada

We left Hamada very much happy, as always, and very much full. After a few rounds of mahjong, we head back to our cottage and got a good night's rest: A good end to a good day. :)

The next part of the Baguio series will include a number of Baguio must-dos and must-go-tos: Café by the Ruins, the Lourdes Grotto, Forest House, Easter Weaving Room, and, my favourite, Choco-laté de Batirol. For now, I leave you with more photos from my first day of my first Baguio 2008 day. ♥

Joey in Baguio

Joey in Baguio: Day1Joey in Baguio: Day1Joey in Baguio: Day1Joey in Baguio: Day1Joey in Baguio: Day1Joey in Baguio: Day1


See many more photos of my Baguio trip on my flickr.
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