From Evernote: |
Press Release/Photos: Cebu Goes Culinary 2010 |
Monday, August 23, 2010
Press Release/Photos: Cebu Goes Culinary 2010
CRITICS LOG: Sabores de España 2010
From Evernote: |
CRITICS LOG: Sabores de España 2010 |
Monday, August 16, 2010
September executive meal @ Ma-yi, City Sports Club Cebu
Dining at the Club has had an epiphany. Especially with Chef Brian Bersonda's ascension as Executive Chef while still helming the kitchen of Ma-yi, our fine dining food outlet at the Club's upper ground floor. While the dress code stands for diners, this is no reason to abstain from enjoying the indulgences to be had at Ma-yi. Consider the dress code part of the ritual of embarking on a gastronomic journey---right in your own Club!
We're all familiar with the themed executive meals at Ma-yi. It's one of the options provided to members in the coupon that comes with the newsletter. While many of us jump at the opportunity of stuffing ourselves at the cornucopia of options at the La Veranda buffet, it's high time we change the scenery just a little bit, and use that coupon for lunch or dinner at Ma-yi.
This month, Ma-yi's theme is pasta. OK, you get it. It's going to be a slew of dishes bathed in tomato sauce. That's what I thought when I was told the theme. Luckily I was wearing a dark shirt. Bolognese spatter shouldn't be a problem to clean up. Lunch started as expected: a piece of bread with a scraping of flavored butter. That wasn't a ripple on my sea of expectations.
First course was a Farmer's Vegetable Soup. Simple, straightforward name. But soups are tricky. They're hard to get right on the taste meter. A good one means time and effort was put into the broth and it's got to be seasoned bit by bit until you get the taste just right. Plus everyone's got a preference, some like it salty, some don't, some like to pepper the bowl black. My personal requirement for a good bowl is that it's one I'd like to have when I'm sick: saturated with nutrients and broth that packs a punch of flavor. I'd say the Farmer's Vegetable Soup was close to perfect. The temperature was on pitch. (And on meeting the chef, I wasn't surprised to see a thermometer sticking out of his sleeve pocket.) The broth was clean, yet sharp with the flavor of herbs, and finished with a vaguely sweet aftertaste. I later found that Chef Brian takes his aromatics very seriously and heavily relies on them to bring flavors to the fore sans the salt. The soup also fared well in the color category and the torn bits of pasta added a rustic feel, like the type of soup one would be offered at a farmer's table in the hinterlands of Italy.
The belly warmer was followed by a Peach, Prosciutto and Mesclun Salad with Mango-Capsicum Vinaigrette; a delightfully balanced salad option with just the right combination of salty, sweet, crunchy, and herby. The mango-capsicum vinaigrette provided the acidity, holding the prosciutto bits and the sweetness of the peach at bay. The capsicum wasn't merely for a pop of color, it contributed to the depth of flavor in the salad. For those worried with portions, set your worries aside. The portions for each dish are enough to tickle your palate with flights of fanciful flavors but not too much to overwhelm the sensibilities. In other words, before the flavors get boring, you're served with another plate.
So far, our culinary journey has centered on a boot-shaped island surrounded by four seas. Chef Brian still gave us Italy, which we expect from a pasta theme, yet he managed to stretch the concept. He knew we'd expect Italian so he gave us Italian soup, salad, (and later on an Italian dolci for dessert), then offered a detour for the taste buds at the main course where he instead prepared a more Asian-inspired pasta dish, the Prawns and Papardelle in Indonesian Red Curry Sauce. Now this is the dish that you as the host should offer to your dinner companion who strongly advocated tempura for dinner. Kudos for the shrimp---it wasn't overdone, and its delicate seafood flavor melded nicely with the curry sauce-coated papardelle. Chef Brian did say that Tuscany tops the list of his foodie destinations and the papardelle definitely represented his tendré for their cuisine. Although usually served with game, the papardelle was beautiful with the Indonesian Red Curry and by beautiful, I don't just mean firm with enough elasticity. When I said it was "coated," I meant infused by the flavor but not submerged in it. A bite will give you a nice hit of curry, a subtle coating of cream, and a tingling of heat in the back of the tongue. Like I said, beautiful.
Another main course option is the Beef and Asparagus Involtini with Fettucine e Porcini, a transitional dish if we're going by the (Italian) seasons as asparagus dishes are spring while porcini heralds the autumnal climes. The pasta in this second dish got the same treatment, al dente and flavorful. It stands out for its lack of artificial flavoring. You'll definitely feel the fifth basic taste in this dish what with the amount of porcini mushrooms in it! Green asparagus came wrapped in slivers of beef and the crunch of the former complemented the bouncy texture of the mushrooms and pasta.
Lastly, a dessert of fresh fruit topped with a citrus granita was served as a palate cleanser and as a refreshing close to the meal. Granitas, as explained by Chef Brian, have to have a certain proportion of ingredients that would result in the perfect crystalline form: like flavored snow in the mouth. Then in the bottom, you'll find cubed pineapples and watermelons with slivers of basil, which gave the otherwise just tangy and sweet combo an extra sensory boost of pungent spicy-clove aroma. The fact that it's dessert minus the guilt (note: no heavy cream in this one), helped to induct the dish into the winners' circle.
Monday, August 9, 2010
Chow.com: How to Taste Dark Chocolate
How to Taste Dark Chocolate Become a connoisseur with these tips By Davina Baum |
Source link: http://www.chow.com/stories/12243?tag=chow_carousel_slide_wrapper;carousel_slide_3
Wednesday, July 21, 2010
Critic's Log: Cake Couture by Trina
Thursday, July 1, 2010
CRITIC’S LOG: Ampao nasad
Monday, May 3, 2010
Event-Food Feature: Great Adobo Challenge 2010
Where: Marco Polo Plaza Hotel
Written by: Kristina Tabon and Marini Esguerra
Word Count: 953
Sometimes I can see steam rising from asphalt roads in the scorching
midday heat. Water is a dream and iced water is . . . well, in Pluto,
something that never was. Such was the day when I braved the heat and
traffic to drive to Marco Polo Plaza Hotel. They were staging the
first-ever 2010 Great Adobo Challenge and I was admittedly curious if
anyone could live up to the "adobo of my dreams." Café Marco was the
inimitable stage of this lovely affair and the adobo specials were to
be had during their lunch and buffet dinners. To make dining even
more fun, diners get to rate their favorites while earning a chance to
win an overnight stay in Manila for dinner at the guest chefs'
restaurants or a round trip ticket for two to Hong Kong.
In the quest for the best adobo 'there is no try'. I will hunt it
down, I will find it, and eat without sharing. Adobo is the holy grail
of Filipino cuisine. It's the one soul-food that embodies the spirit
of the Pinoy. It's what we eat with steaming hot rice, with ice cold
coke on a Sunday brunch with the family. It's the ultimate "Lola's
Secret Recipe." I wanted some of that mouth-watering, tangy, sweet,
aromatic, unexplainably heavenly soul-food.
On March 29 to May 2, 2010, the Marco Polo Plaza challenged four of
the greatest Pinoy Chefs to open the armory and make the most
inspiring adobo humanly possible, and they did not disappoint. Fairy
Godmother made my adobo dreams come true! There it was, my dream
adobo, served on a pristine, white, unassuming plate in stark contrast
to the gleaming glutinous mound of rice. Tasting it was one of the
highlights of the month! Four gloriously talented chefs prepared
several varieties of the dish, each one better than the last, although
come voting time, I abstained. Don't get angry, I was genuinely
confused. I couldn't decide which adobo was better.
The 'Adobong Sugpo sa Taba ng Talangka' was cooked to perfection by
Chef Glenda Barretto. I can see why the Filipino Restaurant Via Mare
is very successful and world-renowned. She represented East
Philippines (Samar) and has secured her niche in the culinary world
when her creations were monumental hits at the Philippine Expo 1992 in
Seville, Spain, the World Expo in 1998 in Lisbon, Portugal, and in
2005, at the World Expo in Aichi, Japan. This formidable woman also
wields the power of the pen as she is a columnist of the Philippine
Star and has authored four cookbooks.
Next to the heavenly sugpo was the creation of Chef Myrna Segismundo,
called the 'Mushroom Adobo Terrine,' but to me it was 'Ingenious,
Yummy Adobo.' Chef Myrna gave my soul-food a modern approach. She is
the Managing Director of TV Food Chefs and is an advocate of the
preservation of traditional Filipino cooking. Also a food writer,
Chef Myrna produces TV Food Chefs with ABS-CBN. Having once been
chairman of the Chefs on Parade (a national culinary competition for
pros and students), she is no stranger to bright lights and
showmanship. On her belt are two cookbooks: The Party Cookbook and
the Philppine Cuisine. Chef Myrna represented Batangas for the Great
Adobo Challenge.
Then there was 'Tinupig Adobo' by Chef Danny de la Cuesta. This
talented food expert from Northern Luzon has two loves: fashion and
food. For both his loves he received tutelage and training overseas—at
FIT in New York for fashion and then at the Le Corden Bleu Ecole de
Cuisine et de Patisserie, in London, with Chef Jean Claude Boucheret
as a mentor. We could go on about where Chef Danny has been but this
is about his sumptuous adobo creation. His version was a twice-cooked
pork and chicken adobo in green mango grilled in banana leaf. Veeeery
nice. And the banana leaf was clever. As a take-away item, one could
microwave the dish for dinner and the banana leaf kept in every drop
of sauce. Marco Polo Plaza's PR Team had the nifty idea of providing
the conference attendees with bags of take-away, so I may have had my
fill at lunch and then relived the gustatory experience at supper.
Brilliant!
Chef Nancy Reyes-Lumen made adobo without the guilt, but with all the
flavor, having carved off every bit of fat from the meat. The name
'Liposuction'd Adobo' spoke for itself, but a taste of it was enough
to give me the warm fuzzies. She said her clan—the Aling Asyang Reyes
Clan—lives to eat. Chef Nancy is another one of those people whom the
Almighty bestowed ten talents: she writes (cookbooks and columns),
critiques, hosts TV shows, does broadcast radio, and shares everything
in her noggin through SMS daily food tips with Smart Telecomm. Like
the other chefs for the Adobo Challenge, she helps to promote our
native cuisine to the rest of the world, but she also works locally to
increase the dietary standards and food literacy in the Philippines.
I can imagine wanting to live one more day just to have that amazing
adobo. With every bite, it felt like global warming was a distant
reality, there were no power fluctuations, and the dolphins were
safe. Happiness really is directly proportional to a full stomach
because that afternoon, I headed out and the world was a better place,
everyone was happy, the sky was the perfect shade of blue with wispy
cotton clouds, and the birds were chirping in the golden sunlight.
When I left Marco Polo Plaza I had the silly smile of someone who
found peace.
Wednesday, April 21, 2010
CRITIC'S LOG: White Party at the Hilton Cebu Resort & Spa
Hilton Cebu Resort and Spa introduces its new leading man, Markus Kraus
APPETITE
Cebu Sensations - column
By Kristina S. Tabon
Body Copy
We've read the news. This summer is the Philippines' hottest ever and
at Mactan Island, Cebu, where UV rays bounce off sedimentary rock like
a mirror, it's a whopping average of 29°C indoors with the air
conditioner on High Cool. In the back burner, all this guilt for
consuming Earth's resources percolate, and then I opened my mail.
Not email. Snail mail. Delivered by messenger. 1700h rendezvous at
the Hilton's Vanilla Beach Sala, an all-day dining restaurant oozing
with mid-twentieth century appeal due to its retro-colonial design and
whitewashed walls. It's open for guests at 0630 to 2300, yet at the
five o'clock call time, the sala was refreshingly exclusive save for
the staff. Not surprisingly, guests were requested to dress in white,
the perfect non-color for the sizzling hot day.
THE MAN
The White Cocktail Party was thrown in the honor of Markus Kraus,
Hilton Cebu's latest addition to their family. He arrived in white
and missing a fedora. Had he donned one, he would've looked like he
came off the set of Casablanca. His best accessory: his lovely wife,
Brigitte. Mr. Kraus comes to Cebu armed with a strong background in
the hotel industry and in working in a multi-cultural environment,
along with extensive experience in food and beverage management and
mentor programs. He has been with Hilton World Resorts since the 90's
and has managed locations as exotic as Dubai, Cairo, Fujairah, and
Ulaanbaatar, among others. His being a Swiss national eventually led
the table conversation to the topic of chocolate and he told us the
story about how his town had a resident chocolate factory and how
every day, the air smelled of milk chocolate. Mr. Markus Kraus had
the undeniable makings of a media darling.
Hilton's new leading man, Markus Kraus with his lovely wife, Brigitte,
and Chef Peter Wicki. Regular fare at the Vanilla Beach Café is
influenced by regional, Mediterranean, and Filipino cuisine,
highlighted by the Chef's Signature dishes, but for the White Party, a
special cocktail menu was served. It was designed to have something
for everybody and made the attendees very very comfortable indeed.
THE MENU
THE FOOD
The all-time favorite chicken lollipop, this crowd pleaser played up
its popularity to the hilt. They were gone in sixty seconds as soon
as they were spotted on the serving trays.
Seafood spring roll with Thai sweet chili. Among many things so
pleasant about the White Party was the well-roundedness of its menu as
well as its down-to-earth quality. Perhaps this was a reflection of
the nature of the party host: Markus Kraus. The seafood spring roll
was a welcome introduction for those going for less meaty fare.
The lemongrass chicken with pineapple: What can I say? It's chicken
on a happy stick! And the pineapple went very well with the sparkling
whites making the rounds.
Another crowd-pleaser, the california roll with wasabi-soy. With the
chicken lollies gone, the hungry writers pounced on this one. Funnily
enough at this party, beverage rolled out faster than food, so before
we had an hors d'oeuvre, we've already had two glasses of wine.
MannyO's was king that evening aside from new GM Markus Kraus, of
course.
The parade of pre-dinner sweet nothings began with the choco profite
rolls.
This fruit tartlet was sensational when followed with a sparkling
white. This author could've had more but there was a dinner up next
at the beachfront, so the plan was to lay off the sweets before my
appetite closes its doors for the evening.
Chocoholics got their fix with the choco rumble.
Savory with contrasting textures, the salmon gravadlax rosette was as
fine as they come.
[insert image here]
Pork Gyoza with Yuzu Soy. Although this author wasn't inebriated
enough to down a shot-glass of soy (weren't supposed to anyway), the
pork gyoza armed our bellies to withstand another round of drinks!
Fiery Thursdays at the Hilton Cebu's beachfront is one of two themed
nights with buffet dinners, the other day being Monday. Think of it
this way, Monday tends to be slow around the metro while Thursday is
the perfect pre-party weekend starter. Either day is a good choice
especially when the food hits the spot and the entertainment,
spectacular.
The baked grouper was just one of the many delicious entrees served at
Fiery Thursday Nights. Local seafood specialties take centre stage
here as well as a hot show of fire poi dancers.
The buffet stretched across the beachfront: one end comprised of a
collection of ceviches and seaweed salads; the other, a high-end
version of a local fruit stand. That means, you could start with
dessert or end with it. Your choice.
stir-fried prawn with garlic and chili
squid adobo with black bean sauce
The next photos are the most photogenic from the bunch, and no
surprise, they're mostly from the desserts table.
puto kutsinta
cassava cake
sapin-sapin
PEOPLE
The usual suspects: From left to right, Cebu Daily New's (CDN) food
columnist, Aissa dela Cruz, KT, Expat's Richard Ramos, CDN Lifestyle's
Regina Aguilar with Hilton PR's Mia Sy. New GM Markus Kraus remarked
how strictly we followed the attire request to come in white. He
thought for sure the staff will respect it, but didn't expect the
guests to go into detail. Kraus was pleasantly surprised at this
observation. A number of the writers did go into detail. Aissa dela
Cruz of Kitchen Stories (CDN) was insightful enough to don metallic
flats for the occasion while yours truly and Sunstar Daily Cebu's
April Rama floundered to our dinner tables in our stilettos. Staff
kindly offered us Hilton-embossed room slippers.
The photo ops were never complete without a tableau: From left to
right, Expat's Richard Ramos, CDN Lifestyle's Regina Aguilar, Hilton's
new GM Markus Kraus with wife, Brigitte, and Chef Peter Wicki, CDN
columnist Aissa dela cruz, Hilton PR's Mia Sy, and KT.
INFORMATION CARD
NAME OF RESTAURANT / Promo Theme nights at the Hilton Cebu Resort and
Spa
Schedule Mondays and Thursdays
Where beachfront of the Hilton Cebu Resort and Spa
Details
Cuisine Filipino favorites, Grill, local seafood
Service type Dinner buffet
Entertainment Dances of the Pacific, fire poi dancing, local bands
Time 6:00PM, dinner; 7:00PM, start of performances
Contact details
Address Punta Engaño, Mactan Island, Cebu Philippines
Telephone number/s For theme nights reservation, call (032) 492.7777
For an exclusive show and dinner buffet, call Events Executives at
(032) 492.7760
Fax number/s
URL/email sales.cebu@hilton.com,
www.hiltonworldresorts.com/cebu