Sunday, March 13, 2011

Act of Contrition

O my gut,
I am heartily happy and sorry for having indulged you again in a very sinful delight.
And I don't detest this guilty pleasure because I know you were satisfied. 
That slice of white forest at the Manila Grand Opera House,
Three layers of moist buttery chiffon cake sandwiched with smooth whipped cream and chunks of preserved strawberries in thick jam, 
Covered with pure, sweet, melt-in-your-mouth white chocolate that's one-and-a-half centimeters thick, 
And topped again with luscious preserved strawberries. 
That big slice of temptation specially made by the hotel's own bakers. 
But most of all, 
Because it offended my weight and figure, 
Who art deserving of all the exercise and calorie restrictions. 
I firmly resolve to sin no more and to avoid the near occasions of sin... 
Kidding!


Monday, March 7, 2011

PG

PG. Patay-gutom? No, it’s not. PG stands for “pagkain galore”. However, since we are now talking about food, then patay-gutom is a good guess. After all, Mom and I acted like it in our past three meals.

I come from a family of food lovers. There are no formally-trained culinary experts in our clan, but we make excellent and palatable dishes. (Yours truly is no exception. Wink!) Each time I go home to Tarlac, Mom prepares food like it’s our town fiesta. The thing is, I’m the only visitor. Actually, I’m no visitor. I live in this house. It’s my home, but Mom gives me that extra-special treatment. She knows I love to eat, and makes sure my favorite dishes are ready by the time I knock on our door.

Before leaving Manila for Tarlac last night, she asked me to buy for dinner one of her much-loved dishes at the Manila Grand Opera House in Avenida – “chicken feet” (Figure PG1). I made two orders. I also got her our long-time love – “shrimps with cashew nuts and green peas”, which comprised only half of the dish, so it’s really a misnomer (Figure PG2). It should be named “shrimps with cashew nuts, green peas, water chest nuts, onion leaves, ginger and celery”. These were to complement the “miki-bihon” waiting at home in Tarlac, thick and thin Chinese noodles cooked plainly with chicken breast, no other fancy stuff (Figure PG3). I also brought some fresh crabs which I cooked in butter and lots and lots of garlic when I arrived (Figure PG4).

When I woke up this morning, it was Mom’s turn to return the favor. The breakfast table was filled with food that reminded me of my happy childhood. The “pinablad  – known as “binatog in Manila, puffy corn kernels with kinayod na niyog (Figure PG5). The “panara grated young papaya with dried shrimp, deep-fried in rice wraps and eaten with sukang Iloco (Figure PG6). And the Filipino breakfast classics, pritong tuyo and scrambled eggs with onion leaves (Figure PG7). And that’s not all of it. My stomach literally drooled at lunch when Mom served a hot bowl of “pinaksiw na ampalayatiny Ilocano bitter melons, kalunay (a small garden plant taxonomically and morphologically related to the spinach) and kamoteng ube cooked in vinegar and bagoong Iloco (Figure PG8). She paired it with “pritong tinapa” – freshly made everyday, my hometown’s best delicacy ever (Figure PG9).

And now, I think I’m five pounds heavier. It’s okay. Besides being with Mom, I always have a good reason to go home.

Figure PG1. Chicken feet from Manila Grand Opera House.

Figure PG2. Shrimps cashew nuts and green peas, also from Manila Grand Opera House.

Figure PG3. Miki-bihon, simple yet delectable. Our main carbohydrate source instead of rice, just for this meal of course. Hehe.

Figure PG4. My very own (all-female) crab in butter and garlic.

Figure PG5. Pinablad, a favorite breakfast among Ilocanos in Tarlac. My grandfather's sister used to make this when she was still alive.

Figure PG6. Panara. As of today, there's only one person who cooks and sells this in our town's public market. I asked her one time for the recipe but she didn't give it to me. I'll find out, honey, sooner or later. Also in the photo: fried Libby's Vienna sausage.

Figure PG7. Pinoy breakfast classics. Tuyo at binating itlog.

Figure PG8. Pinaksiw na ampalaya. This is actually an Ilocano-Capampangan fusion. The addition of kamoteng ube is authentically our style.

Figure PG9. Tinapang galunggong. Freshly made everyday in our town. The best tinapa I've ever tasted in my life.

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

The Golden Return

The son spoiled his 77-year-old mom again.

It was Sunday, 27 February 2011. It’s routine for Mom and me to hear evening mass at the Powerplant Mall and have dinner there afterwards. This day, we decided to go to Malate Church for a change. You should have seen the excitement in her eyes when I told her that we would eat at the Aristocrat after the mass.

That was our first mass together at Malate Church. My first time was in August last year when I attended a family friend’s wedding. Hers was in the 1950s – and that was also her last. Hearing mass with me now marked her return to that church after more than 50 years. The moment was so nostalgic that she actually prayed like a Catholic, as she used to be. (She’s Protestant, by the way.)

After the mass, we walked our way to the Aristocrat for dinner. When we got to our table, she kept on looking at the walls and interiors of the restaurant as if it was her first time. She told me then that the last time she ate here was in the 1950s. And now, fifty years later, she was back for a date with her man, not with my late Dad but with her only child. What could be more romantic than being married to your mom?

I ordered my favorite Aristocrat dish, dinuguan. I got Mom her much-loved food, camaron rebusado. I also ordered other dishes that filled up our table and would feed an entire family. Nothing was left.

We walked to Manila Bay like she used to with my late Dad. It amused me a lot to see her enjoying the night. I knew and felt at that very moment that fifty golden years of good memories suddenly came flashing into her mind. I held her hand and told her it was 10 PM. It was time to go home.


(Photo: Mom enjoying a luscious dinner at the Aristocrat in Malate, her first in over 50 years.)