New at Chip Bee

March 30th, 2010

The Daily Scoop

Brownie with Surprising Coconut ice cream

Brownie with Surprising Coconut ice cream

There are lots of new hand-churned ice cream shops opening. This is my new favourite.

The Daily Scoop used to be in Sunset Way but have recently opened a new shop in the space vacated by Galerie Cho Lon at Chip Bee.  You can watch them make it fresh, daily, on the fascinating cold plate machine. I guess that’s what hand-churned means. (well I found it fascinating) You can eat in too; they do waffles, brownies, affogato. It’s fun rather than fancy, with a mural of Truths, like “Man cannot live on ice cream alone, but women surely can”  (or are they only Truths to me?)

Mural of Truth

It’s excellent quality ice cream, with some novel flavours. It’s creamy without being overly rich. Smooth, not icy. Nicely balanced. Happily, there are over 40 flavours to choose from. I recommend the Passion Pinada (an unexpected creamy passionfruit/pineapple/mango), Salted Mr Brown (salty/sweet/chocolate), Surprising Coconut (with strips of coconut), Baileys Choc Chip (yup, Baileys + chocolate chip). The chendol is wonderfully gula-melaka-y. More than any other brands that I’ve tried.  I’m not sure I’ll get round to all 40 but I am trying hard.

Salted Mr Brown, Bailey’s Choc Chip, Xtra! Stout

Salted Mr Brown, Bailey’s Choc Chip, Xtra! Stout

Waffle with Hazelnut Heaven

Waffle with Hazelnut Heaven

La Fromagerie

La Fromagerie Cheese

It’s all about CHEESE! From Julien Bompard, this new little nook sells great artisanal cheese, as well as (swoon) serves fondue and raclette. Dieu de dieu!  I can’t wait; I haven’t had either in years. If you’ve never tried it, fondue is a heated pot of melted cheese that you dip hunks of bread into. (2 people, $28)

Raclette is slices of cheese semi-melted and then served on a slice of boiled potato. (2 people, $22)

They also do Mac and cheese and a traditional onion soup.

La Fromagerie Cheese

Oui oui oui!

The shop is not as cheese-porn as the cheese room at Jones’, but that I can forgive for hot melted cheese!

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The Buyology of the Perfect Designer Bag

March 30th, 2010

By Fashion Jeannie

Last month, I stepped over to the other side. And am now on a slippery slope to emptying out my retirement fund.

For years, I snickered at people who were into their designer bags. Why put up a year’s salary (if you want the Hermes Birkin) to buy into a pretentious lifestyle of champagne and caviar? I was (and still am. I might add), after all, my own person, my own brand, unlike no other. Buying into Louis Vuitton or Christian Dior clashed with my very ethos of life. Worse, I’d read that there was a 14 times mark-up on Louis Vuitton bags! Big luxury brands were ripping people off left, right and centre!

Designer Bags... Fake?Then, six years ago, I set eyes on the Balenciaga motorcycle bag. It was love at first sight. It had everything I wanted in a bag – it was casual chic; it had tassels (I am a firm believer that life can be improved with leather tassels and fringes), it didn’t have its brand name emblazoned across the bag; it had the perfect symmetry; and, ironically, it reflected ‘me’. The bag called out to me from the pages of Vogue, Her World, net-a-porter, but I resisted. You can’t empty out half a month’s salary on a bag! But the leather, the smell! I was in love.

Still baulking at the price tag, and holding on to my warped principles, I succumbed to a Shenzhen special – a fake bag.  Yesssss…. the dreaded imposter.   But somehow, it didn’t feel right. I carried it for a few months.  I had a few people exclaim “WOW! Is that THE bag?”

And I could never lie.  It just wasn’t the real thing.  I couldn’t live the lie.  It was in the bin soon after, and I made myself content with Zara and other unknown and high street brands. ..which were fine, but the deep down, I continued to carry the torch for ‘my’ bag.

Then one day last month, after a trying day at work, I convinced myself that I deserved it.  Why work so hard when you can’t give yourself a big treat every once in a while, right?  So I traipsed down to the Balenciaga store, slapped down my credit card, and commanded the sales person to “Give me it!”  It cost me a European vacation, but 15 minutes later, as I lovingly cradled it in my arms, I knew that we were a perfect fit. We belonged together.

While I am in no way a label queen, there was a special something that the bag gave me that I possessed little of before – of course it made me feel a bit more confident in the company of higher-powered people; and it made me more confident when walking into a posh store, but more importantly, it gave me a sense of preciousness.  I suddenly realised the preciousness of friends, of moments, and of life.

It’s funny that a bag’s given this to me. Maybe it’s because a want had been fulfilled. It’s awful to say that something so material has given me a fresh outlook to life, but it has.  And I feel triumphant, that in these instant gratification times that we live in, that I waited. Because the wait was worth it.

The downside, though, is that I’ve started looking at more beautiful babies to collect. And this newfound habit is going to bankrupt me.

So, in an about turn of this mini introspection, I’m going to go into a more frivolous consumer moment, and bring you what I will hanker for another six years before slapping my credit card down for another major bag buy. After all, good things come to those who wait.

1. The Chloe Paraty (in python)

The Chole Paraty (in python)

Perfect proportions, the hardware is understated yet decisive, it fits spare underwear, cosmetic pouch, a netbook, and it’s a modern classic.

Various colours and sizes of the Paraty range at the Chloe store at Ngee Ann City, and available here.

2. Kate Moss for Longchamp

Kate Moss for Longchamp

The braided detail, the zebra print lining, the Bohemian feel.. what’s not to love! And it’s Kate Moss!

Launched last week at the Longchamp boutique in Singapore at Ngee Ann City

3. Alexander McQueens knuckle duster clutch in python

Alexander McQueen’s knuckle duster clutch in python

RIP, Lee McQueen. A truly great loss to the fashion world. I first spied this little beauty at the On Pedder store in Singapore and thought that maybe in time to come, and I ate instant noodles for a year, that I could get my hands on this beauty. But I think these have all been snapped up now, and I will only ever possess it in my dreams.

Isn’t it gorgeous?

4. Mulberry Bayswater Leather bag

Mulberry Bayswater Leather bag

Classic lines, lovely leather. This will last you a lifetime without the hefty price tag of a bigger brand label (I won’t mention names). Available at the Mulberry store at Hilton and at Takashimaya.

5. Fendi Peekaboo

Fendi Peekaboo

Classic shape, a goes-with-anything bag. Subtle hardware. Iconic design.

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Best Beauty Websites

March 30th, 2010

By Beauticia

A beauty junkie needs places to indulge her addiction.  A place with like-minded gals who want to know the ins and out of all things beautiful, keep up with the latest trends, educate herself on for what’s worth parting with her dollars and, naturally, to shop!

The internet has a ton of sites to feed even the most voracious beauty addicts, but to keep things simple, here are my top 5 beauty websites – each very different from the other – and in no particular order:

Beautypedia

Beautypedia

Beautypedia.com is an amazing database of candid, tell-it-like-it-is product reviews by Paula Begoun, consumer advocate and cosmetics’ industry expert and the author of 18 best-selling books including my personal must-have beauty bible Don’t Go to the Cosmetics Counter Without Me.  Beautypedia contains thousands of reviews of makeup and skincare products from a huge list of brands from the usual suspects such as Lancome, Estee Lauder, Chanel and Christian Dior to smaller brands like Lorac, Laura Mercier, Urban Decay and Chantecaille.   It is updated and added to on a regular basis.  Unfortunately it is not free, but the annual subscription is modest (USD 24.95) and worth every cent.  Before you drop another dollar on the latest product from your favourite glammy product line, check out Beautypedia.com.  It will save you a fortune on horrendously over-priced products that may not be doing very much for your skin.

StrawberryNET

StrawberryNET

Shopping, sweet shopping.  I was born with eyes bigger than my makeup case(s) and have collected a ridiculously large array of cosmetics over the years.  More lipsticks than I could possibly wear in a lifetime, and eyeshadow shades so garish (but looked so chic on the underage model in that month’s glossy mag) that they remain unopened, albeit pretty, in their packaging years later.  Although I’m much more restrained these days, I still can’t help checking out the latest collections each season from this or that brand.  To ease a little of the guilt, shopping at strawberrynet.com means getting your goodies at a discount – make-up, skin-care, hair-care and fragrances.  And free shipping to Singapore is pretty darn good too.

Real Self

Real Self

This website is fascinating.  For any cosmetic procedure you may have ever wondered about – be it hair removal, laser treatments, veneers or a full face-lift – realself.com provides an authentic, consumer-driven forum for people to share opinions and experiences.  There are literally thousands of reviews from ordinary people about every type of cosmetic procedure you could imagine (and some you’d rather not).  Many, very generously, share their pre and post surgical photos too (eye-opening to say the least!).  Doctors will also post opinions on individual’s cases from time to time, and share detailed information about various procedures.  Not for the faint of heart as some of the personal stories and photos of those who underwent more aggressive procedures spare no punches. This site has done for cosmetic surgery what TripAdvisor.com did for travelers.  An absolute must read for anyone considering plastic surgery or any type of cosmetic procedure, big or small.

Make Up Alley

Make Up Alley

Like realself.com, makeualley.com is a consumer driven forum all about – you guessed it – makeup! Fun, fun, fun!  Members rant, review, rejoice and revile every makeup product under the sun.  There is a huge database of reviews from ordinary makeup users from all over the world.  These reviews are entirely subjective and not expert in any way, but still provide a good point of reference if you are “lemming” for (makeupalley speak for “dying for, must have!”) the latest Chanel red lippy (is the red red enough?  Is it a blue-based red or an orange-red? What’s the staying power like?). Launched in 1999, it has grown into one of the largest beauty social networks on the web today reaching millions of (mainly) women around the globe.  There are message boards too for makeup, hair, fashion, fitness and cafe (general chit-chat) if you want to ask a question about a certain product or trend or just interact with other users.  The site also provides members with the ability to swap unwanted products by posting a list on their member’s profile (kind of like Ebay but with no money involved, other than postage).  And other members regularly post photos of their own makeup looks and experiments.

Style.com

Style.com

This site is magazine-glossy (it is part of Vogue magazine) and features the latest trend reports from the runway, interviews and advice from the hottest makeup artists du jour, a database of backstage beauty shots from various fashion shows, a beauty blog, profiles on the hottest beauty icons from now and yesteryear, and a beauty guide section featuring a range of magazine-y beauty articles.  Style.com has great makeup photos that will inspire plenty of ideas for revamping your makeup look for the season.  It also has a forum for die-hard devotees with time on their hands.

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Head Outside! MacRitchie Reservoir Park

March 30th, 2010

I wasn’t paying attention when Mai told me the walk was 11k.  In my head, it was going to be a nice amble, so I headed out to MacRitchie in my crocs flip flops.  3 hours and very painfully shredded feet later, we were back in the car.  My feet have since recovered and I’m looking forward to doing it again, with shoes!

MacRitchie Reservoir Park

There are shorter walks around MacRitchie, but this long one is lovely, and great exercise.  It’s good for the soul to be surrounded by green, water, nature and breathe fresh air.  It’s Singapore so it’s hot; bring water, and wear proper shoes!

We did the pink trail in and then the yellow trail out

We did the pink trail in and then the yellow trail out

You set off from the swanky new carpark/entrance and head for the treetop walk (about 5k),

Lots of green is good for the soul

Lots of green is good for the soul

walk over the lovely treetop bridge,

The bridge is one-way traffic only

The bridge is one-way traffic only

It’s narrow and high and very secure.  The high sides give you a greater sense of comfort. (well in theory anyway)

The bridge is at canopy level

The bridge is at canopy level

From the bridge, don’t head back the way you came – follow the sign that points to another 5k.

It’s a well-constructed, well-maintained trail and don’t panic, I’m pretty sure you get a phone signal all the way!

It’s a well-constructed, well-maintained trail and don’t panic, I’m pretty sure you get a phone signal all the way!

Basically your walk takes you around the reservoir (although you are in sight of water only at the beginning and end).

It was evening when we popped out again

It was evening when we popped out again

The bridge closes at 5pm, so time it well.  You should be off the trail by sunset, clambering around there in the dark would be a bit scary.

Read Head Outside! Labrador Nature Reserve

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New Desserts at 313

March 17th, 2010

Much has been written about the 4 stories of Forever 21 in 313 Somerset so I’m going to skip that and talk about the new desserts I found there.  You know I will go to most places for sugar.

As the mall is geared towards a younger crowd, lots of the food you find there is similarly targeted.  Snacks, munchies, desserts.

The place has multiple cold-stone/cold marble ice cream outlets.  It’s obviously the new bubble tea of today!  Having tried an existing outlet before I wasn’t impressed.  The basic concept is scoops of ice cream + edibles (choc, cookies, gummy bears) mixed together on a cold stone slab (so the ice cream doesn’t melt).  The ice cream I had tried before just wasn’t fab.

But I loved the look of Maggie Moo’s Red Velvet so much I gave it a go.  It’s red velvet ice cream (red velvet cake is a choc cake with red colouring), with a brownie and pecans chopped and mixed through it on the cold marble slab.  (Who says packaging doesn’t move people?)

Yes, it was delicious and worth having.  Sharing is probably a good idea as it’s quite rich.

Maggie Moo's Red Velvet

The Icing Room

Icing RoomI thought this shop was interesting.  (far more interesting is why shops don’t like you taking photos of them to publicise them.  You’d think they’d love it.  No, they run after you and try to make you delete the pictures.  The things I do for you, dear readers)

It sells really pretty cakes and pastries, but it also has this cute gimmick.  You can buy a 4″ cake, then decorate it yourself.  You get icing in a bag, shapes, candies, that you can play with.  Turns out this is the second outlet, the first is at Jurong Point and it’s by the BreadTalk people.

See the girl freaking out that I’m taking a picture?

See the girl freaking out that I’m taking a picture?

You put the cake on the stand and then play with the candies and bags of icing

You put the cake on the stand and then play with the candies and bags of icing

Marvelous Cream

Marvelous CreamThe second outlet for the Japanese gourmet ice cream (you might have tried it at Ion), sundaes and desserts.  At this outlet they have a few other confections, including Hokkaido waffle sandwiches.  There’s caramel flavour, tiramisu flavour, chocolate cream…For you, I bought a couple to try.  Mm, good.  Unexpectedly, the Hokkaido caramel and milk one was better than I’d hoped.  Unfortunately the tiramisu was sold out, and that was their recommendation.  I’m definitely going back to try more.


Hokkaido Waffle Sandwiches

They also have “Patiscream – Patissier Ice Cream Cake Collection” that has some delicious looking things – I’ll have to try these two for sure (there are lots more).  So many ways to make your ass grow.  It’s an abundant universe!


Belgium Noisette Chocolate

Belgium Noisette Chocolate

Crème Brulee Banana

Crème Brulee Banana

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Chanteuses Encore

March 17th, 2010

You might also like Favourite Alt Chanteuses

There’s been a rush of great music lately.  Plus, my itunes account got topped up!

Last month, Corinne Bailey Rae and Sade released new albums. Yay!

Corinne Bailey Rae

Tragically, Corinne’s husband died of an accidental drug overdose a last year. And yes, you can hear the pain in this album, The Sea.

Corinne Bailey Rae

It is a gorgeous journey in tenderness, fragility and yearning.  I want to use words like gentle, birdlike, aching, but I think the word that I most would use for this is exquisite.

It’s really nothing like her eponymous first album, which was joyous, sunflowers and summertime. (Put Your Records On, Like A Star)

This is just beautiful gentle grieving, yet strangely not overwhelmingly melancholy.  It is too full of love for that.  It’s a really intimate look into an emotional world.  She’s put it all out there for us to share.

It’s a long, loving kiss goodbye.

Best tracks: her compositions Id do it again, The Sea and her cover of the Jimi Hendricks classic Little Wing.

Id do it all again

Here’s The Sea

There are up-tempo tracks that take a peek at joy but still don’t luxuriate in happy.

It’s beautiful, much lauded by the critics and I totally love it.  (italics in case you miss the point)

5 stars from me (out of 5)

Sade

Soldier of Love, Sade

So the world has been waiting for Sade to return.  Her last album Lovers Rock was released in 2000!  How time zips by.

SadeSo to say Soldier of Love was much anticipated is an understatement.

It is quintessential Sade.  And yes, 10 years on, she is still as outrageously beautiful as she was when she first appeared on the scene.

I like it, I like listening to it, but it hasn’t struck me the same way that Corinne’s beautiful emotion has.  They are very different albums.  Sade is still easy-breezy, stylish and effortless, and really easy to listen to.

While I loved Somebody Already Broke My Heart from her last album, I can’t say I’ve found the hit on this album.  The title song is fun and rhythmic, but it doesn’t have the “laid-back meets yearning” thing that works for her.  Maybe The Moon and The Sky will grow on me a bit more.

Still, Sade fans will not be disappointed.  The Queen of laid-back blues/soul is undoubtedly back, and I predict this album will be a hit.

Two new young female singers to watch:

Ellie Goulding

Ellie Goulding

Ellie is 23 and writes catchy, lush electro-pop that has a really cool sound (dubbed ‘folktronica’)

Love this:

Marina and the Diamonds

Marina

Also a newcomer to watch, Marina has just broken through too and has a really distinctive style, powerful vocals and her music is slightly odd.  You know I like that.  Her music kinda reminds me of Adam and the Ants. Love Mowglis Road

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Anything Also Anyhow

March 17th, 2010

Remember Clementine?

Clementine Weekly

When I first started trying this out last May, this writing and connecting thing, I first launched with a weekly ezine called Clementine Weekly.

The illustrations were done by a really talented doodle-artist, eeshaun. He makes simple shapes and lines really dynamic, and a terrific sense of colour.

Now we get to see a wider range of his work – his second solo exhibition, “Anything Also Anyhow”, is on at a new store “Actually Actually” in Purvis Street. His stuff will be up until 12 April, so make sure you drop in and have a look. We heart eeshaun!

Anything Also Anyhow

Actually Actually

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Land of Mughals and Paupers

March 17th, 2010

By Metamorphoenix

Meta meets India!

Taj Mahal, Agra

Taj Mahal, Agra

I decided to make my maiden voyage to India with my eldest sister and her family over the Chinese New Year break. It was one of equal parts wonder and dismay, of being welcomed but not wanting to be a part of.

Before the trip my head was resounding with exhortations from friends who loved their India trips but issued warnings of “don’t drink the water”, “brush your teeth with mineral water”, “beware of fruits and vegetables washed in tap water” and “make sure you check the bottles of mineral water are not refilled”. Needless to say, I was a mess of excitement and trepidation over this holiday.

Palace of the Wind, Jaipur

Palace of the Wind, Jaipur

Armed to the teeth with Immodium and Lacteol Fort, I decided not to over react and brushed my teeth with tap water, just ensuring that I spat out all that I could. And to remove any worry of mineral bottle integrity in restaurants, we hydrated ourselves daily with the absolutely refreshing Kingfisher Premium beer. Can you say “Heaven”?

So the hard water made my hair feel like raffia. So the pollution was bad enough to aggravate my brother-in-law’s asthma. So I was coated with a thin film of dust within an hour of leaving the hotel. I was in the land of the Mughals (remember those history lessons?) and was determined to handle mild discomforts.

One of Delhi’s street corner slums

One of Delhi’s street corner slums

I loved the parts of Old Delhi, where we were surprised by the sight of ruins popping up around the corner from shophouses and homes. Heading into Rajasthan and Jaipur, I loved the colourful little fruit and food carts around which the bright saris of Rajasthani women wove and the duller coloured men loafed.

I loved the hardworking camels, horses and elephants that clopped alongside rumbling trucks with their huge loads and “Blow Horn” signs. I laughed each time we passed a motorcycle laden with the entire family of dad, mum three kids and a babe-in-arms.

The historical buildings just about blew me away – Neemrana Fort Palace, the Amber Fort, Palace of the Wind, Taj Mahal, the Red Fort – the mind-boggling beauty of the architecture and majesty was awe-inspiring.

Ranthambore National Park

Ranthambore National Park

When we went to the Ranthambore National Park, we had the fortune of having a tigress walk out among our jeeps and saunter past us not two metres away. What an absolutely breath-taking experience.

But the traffic and pollution of Delhi and the rest of India have a way of driving you mad, probably because everyone on the road drives with one hand permanently on the horn. Then there’s the nerve-wracking experience of vehicles driving against the flow of traffic, the pedestrians who, by some miracle, cross the road seemingly by faith and make it safely through.

What made me depressed was that underlying the modernity of the cities and the ‘progress’ it professes to have made, lies the squalor of the slums and the mounds of plastic trash that seem to have become a part of the landscape. What made me ashamed was that I wanted to distance myself from the abject poverty.

Begging is rampant, and everyone is encouraged to ignore it. But professional beggars or not, the children’s pleading faces pull at your heartstrings. And it seems that despite the progress of the Delhi Metro and the promise of international events like the Commonwealth Games, one gets the feeling India will remain largely unchanged.

Jaipur City Centre

Jaipur City Centre

The people want progress. The infrastructure is being built. But there’s a centuries-old social class structure, and a bureaucracy like none other. There will be change. It just may take a few generations.

I was thankful to remain a tourist in India, staying in 3 and 4-star hotels, cruising past people in a chauffeured car, oohing and aahing at its attractions, employing Dettol wet-wipes at regular intervals and hardening my heart to the outstretched palms.

I loved India. I hated India. I was glad to get home again.

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Salamat Po, Bonifacio!

March 17th, 2010
35 Kreta Ayer Road | Tel: 6222 6676

35 Kreta Ayer Road | Tel: 6222 6676

Despite a lot of time spent in the Philippines over the years and some very good Pinay friends, I don’t actually know a lot about Filipino food.

I had encountered Adobo before, as well as Sinigang (tamarind based soup.  You can buy the stock for Sinigang at Lucky Plaza and make it at home, it’s sour-ish soup), Lechon (a whole roasted pig), ihaw-ihaw (grilled on coals), the breakfast of garlic fried rice and longanisa (fatty sausage) but not much else.

Generally the cuisine has some Chinese, Asian influences; but compared to Thai and Malay food, less use of spice and not a lot of chilli.  It’s not just balut and mangoes!

BonaficioSo my Pinay posse decided to fix my ignorance and take me to Bonifacio, a smart-casual eatery in Kreta Ayer that does the real McCoy.

The restaurant is nicely done.  Not too casual, and still with a sense of style.  It’s pretty mellow, the service is good, the staff is great (a shoutout to Divine, Jerome and Sharon), and the menu is quite extensive, so we didn’t try everything, but here’s a selection you should try.

Pugad Laing


Pugad Laing

Taro leaves cooked in coconut, topped with yummy grilled prawns.  A little like ‘masak lemak’.  I brought it home for Susi to try, and she pronounced ‘Sedap when kena the chilli’.  So now you know.  Ask for spicy when you order it.

Daing na Bangus


I really liked this, and would go back just for it.  Bangus is milkfish (a white fish) that’s smoked, fried, and served with a salsa.  Clean flavours and yummy.  (see Aldo’s description below.  It might be clean flavours but not easy to make!)

Hala Pata!


Daing na Bangus


Apparently the must-have.  Deep fried leg of pig.  Crispy, crunchy, fatty, porky.   Beloved by all.

Turon


Hala Pata

Yummy dessert, almost like banana fritters, but lighter.  A cross between churros and banana fritters.  It’s fried, it’s banana, it has caramel, what can possibly be wrong with that combo??

Bonifacio serves several versions of Halo-Halo, including the Ginataang version, which is different from the standard Halo-halo.  I found it really sweet so be warned!

Turon



I’m going back to try the corn beef pasta as I find that a fascinating culinary concept! There’s tons more on the menu so it may take more than one visit.  I especially want to try the Binukadkad na Isda (fried fish with tamarind and eggplant)

Make sure too, that you have the garlic rice, buko (young coconut) juice, and of course, calamansi juice.  Remember though, to ask for less sugar, as even I am defeated by the Filipino sweet tooth, and that’s saying something!

Pinoy friends tell us a bit more about the dishes (Thanks Essa and Aldo):

Essa:

Turon: Classic Filipino dessert made of quartered bananas covered in brown sugar and encased in thin spring roll wrapper, then deep fried. Often also comes with a sliver of ripe jackfruit in the middle that just takes this beloved snack up a notch. Turon is ubiquitous Filipino street fare. It’s simple to make and combines crunch and sweetness so delicately. I remember summer afternoons happily munching on turon as merienda!

Crispy pata

Crispy Pata

Cholesterol-laden and highly calorific indulgence. I make sure to have some every time I visit home. It’s quite laborious: a whole hind leg of a pig is first boiled in spices for a good 90 minutes and then deep fried, while at the same time trying to ensure that the meat remains juicy and moist. I haven’t mustered the courage to attempt this at home and brave the serious oil spatters. But there is truly no need to, as many Filipino restaurants can make a great crispy pata.

The crispy, crunchy skin, having absorbed the flavors of peppercorns, onions, vinegar and bay leaves during the boiling, is highly coveted. The whole hind leg is served with a variety of dipping sauces (from vinegar with crushed garlic to soy sauce with bird’s eye chili, and everything else in between) and a mountain of steaming rice. Crispy pata is the guilty pleasure of Filipino food.

Aldo:

Laing: Growing up, I was wary of eating anything with milk or coconut as they had the tendency to upset my stomach. So when our family cook, Betty, informed me that she was going for a vacation and that her post would be taken over by Ellen, I knew I was in big trouble. Ellen hailed from the Bicol region of the Philippines, a region known for the incorporation of chilli and coconut milk in anything and everything they cook.

Neither did it help when Ellen revealed her specialty to be laing– something my 10-year old mind imagined to be a deadly combination of crushed red chilli, fresh coconut milk and leaves from a plant I can only describe as “hairy.” Due to my overactive imagination, dinnertime became an extension of playtime where I played hide-and-seek and “catch-me-if-you-can” to my clearly unamused nanny.

It was only when I was a bit older when I started to appreciate the complexity of this hearty dish of torn and dried taro leaves and stems. The musky flavour of the plant is coddled by the creaminess of the ginger-infused coconut milk. The bite of the red chilli serves as perfect foil to the other-taste-numbing goodness of sautéed pork belly and salted fish. A versatile dish that can be served piping hot or at room temperature, laing’s flavours can only intensify over time.

Indeed when I was older and after I visited Ellen’s region (where the people have withstood house wrenching typhoons and earth shattering volcanic eruptions), the only running around when “laing” was mentioned is the dash I make towards the dinner table.

Tinapang Bangus

What an off-putting picture

What an off-putting picture! But delicious, I promise!

The first gutted-then boiled-then dried-then smoked-then finally fried national fish is usually served with dark pink shelled salted egg, and fresh or boiled tomatoes (yes, the fruit). The salted egg oddly compliments the saltiness of the smoked fish, while the tomatoes (or as some would prefer it, the dipping in cane vinegar) help prepare and placate you for the next burst of smoky delight.

When done right, the smoking process infuses the meat of the fish with a distinct near-burnt character that disposes one to imagine the idyllic sun drenched countryside. The bangus belly is also an experience of gustatory contrast as the smokiness from both the boiling sea salt-ed water and the slowly burning wood shavings provide the perfect background for the silky sweetness of this freshwater fish.

Halo-halo

Halo-Halo

The ubiquitous halo-halo, whose name literally means ‘mixed together’, has as many versions as there are merchants, for the only two staple  ingredients are crushed ice and milk (even the milk may have  variations!). The best ones are those that provide you with an array of contrasting flavours and textures – from the crunch of the dried pinipig and shaved corn kernels, to the chewiness of the sweet beans  or nata de cocos; from the earthy texture of a spoonful of  rootcrop  royale ube halaya (purple yam) to the velvety bliss that is leche flan  (milk-egg custard with a caramel finish). The result is a festival of flavours replicated by the spectrum of colours from the numerous ingredients swirling in the icy, milky whirlpool that’s in your glass.

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