Saturday, May 24, 2014

What's for dinner? Cockroach.

Desperate times call for deep-fried roaches

To address the imminent worldwide food crisis, experts say protein-rich insects are the panacea. Have we got a choice if there is nothing else to eat?
There’s nothing left in the fridge. There is widespread famine; there is chaos in the fictional zombie land created by The Walking Dead co-makers Charlie Adlard and Robert Kirkman. As stomachs growl in hunger, survivors resort to killing each other for food.
But that’s fiction, and reality bites harder.
Photo source: wikimedia.org/Takoradee
Photo source: wikimedia.org/Takoradee
In desperate times and with empty stomachs, experts say insects may be the answer to the growing starvation, with projections that, by 2050, we would need to increase food production worldwide by 70 percent in order to feed the estimated nine billion hungry mouths across the world. The protein-rich locusts are groomed to be the next worldwide food superstar, thanks to their nutritional value (they are rich in protein, amino acids, and vitamins) and availability, plus they produce small carbon emission, the culprit for global warming and climate change.
In the recently conclu-ded four-day “Insects to Feed the World” conference held in the Netherlands, professor Arnold van Huis, in an AFP article, “Locust for Dinner?” says there are approximately 2,000 edible insects that can supply huge markets. But the more pressing question is, are we ready to trade pasta for cicada?
In the Philippines, where anything that moves—rats, frogs, beetles, ants, dogs, snakes, and cats—is whipped into creative cuisine, eating and cooking locust are next to ordinary, a folkloric, regional way of life steeped not just in necessity but in culture and tradition.
Our ingenuity and audacity to cook and eat exotic dishes are rooted in hunger, our need for survival, and, if you think about it, our aversion to letting anything go to waste. Think coconuts. In a typical Filipino kitchen, everything is used. A pig, for instance, can be cooked into numerous dishes, utilizing different parts. Its internal organs, blood, tail, feet, nose, ears, and cheeks are made into sisig, dinuguan, and other tasty dishes. In Central Luzon, insects are the alternative menu when the price of meat is beyond reach.  In Pampanga, crickets, which share a common ancestry with cicadas and locusts, are cooked adobo-style, locally known as camaro. Although the crunchy insect gives off a hint of sweetness, Kapampangans pair it with desserts like halo-halo and leche flan to wash down the distinct taste. In Davao, Agusan, and Surigao provinces, meanwhile, woodworms or tamilok are the specialty. Live woodworms are either eaten raw or dipped in vinegar. Also in Davao and in Batangas, fruit bats are not spared from the hungry tummy of locals, who like them with tomatoes, vinegar, garlic, laurel leaves, and pepper.
Our neighboring countries also share the same culinary culture. In the streets of Thailand, a plethora of deep-fried, seasoned creepy-crawlers like grasshoppers, water bugs, maggots, black scorpions, ants, and crickets are available for the locals and tourists to feast on. The same goes in the streets of Malaysia, Taiwan, China, and Vietnam.
In TLC’s Bizarre Food, host Andrew Zimmern takes us into the world of “disgusting” and exotic cuisines, including Japan’s frog sashimi, Morocco’s pastilla with pigeon, Trinidad and Tobago’s cow heel soup, Taiwan’s fried bees, Vietnam’s silk worm, Alaska’s jellied moose nose, and who knows, more undiscovered, undocumented bizarre cuisines around the world.
But no episode features Western countries—like the United States and Europe—and their insect-eating culture. Insects are not part of their everyday fare.
The United Nation’s Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO) says in its Edible Insects: Future Prospects for Food and Feed Security report, Western countries, like the US, have negative attitudes toward insects. “Insect harvesting has been associated with the hunter-gatherer era and in turn with ‘primitive’ forms of food acquisition,” says the report. FAO explains that in Western societies—where protein is derived from animals—insects are “virtually synonymous with nuisance: mosquitoes and flies invade homes, leaving unwanted bites.” Perhaps, they would rather die, or as depicted in the TWD comic series, kill their neighbors, than eat            an insect.
But isn’t this also the case in the more Westernized, prosperous cities in the country? While FAO says that insect eating is widespread in tropical countries, including the Philippines, modernized Metro Manila’s city dwellers, most far removed from nature, will think twice before eating deep-fried locust or kalderetang cicada for lunch.
While we may paint a sinister picture, eating exotic insect dishes have health and environmental benefits. FAO says that edible insects have high protein, vitamins, and amino acids. They also have high food conversion rate. Crickets, for example, need six times less feed than cattle, four times less than sheep, and twice less than pigs and chickens to produce the same amount of protein.
It is also unlikely for insects, compared with farm animals, to transmit diseases to human beings. A huge plus: Since insects need little water and leave smaller carbon emission footprints, compared with poultry, pork, and beef, consuming them benefits the environment.
Insect harvesting, FAO also says, “needs low-capital investments option that offers entry even to the poorest sections of society, such as the landless.”
So, is it about time we eat these creepy, crawly insects for merienda or dinner? As Andrew Zimmern says in his show, if it looks good, eat it.

Thursday, May 15, 2014

too hot to handle

Hot to handle chefs and their cool concoctions

With Manila temperatures reaching almost 40 degrees this year and El Niño looming over our heads, three of the hottest chefs in Manila help cool things down with their own signature desserts. But then again, with these chefs around, will days and nights ever be cold?
Images by Noel Pabalate
(Images by Noel Pabalate)
CHEF JEREMY FAVIA, 29
For Chef Jeremy, a man can never go wrong with a dessert and cocktail in one. According to him, making the strawberry mojito aspic—with layers of fruits and gelatin, a shot of rum and a hint of fresh mint, and a zing of lime—symbolizes how courting a girl should be: done with a lot of patience and accuracy. In addition, he added three red roses with the fresh strawberries. “This dessert is all about the ‘setting.’ Also, you don’t need to buy chocolates and roses, because you’ve got them all in one rock glass. It’s a terrine of flavor, texture, and color. Waking up all your five senses.”
His favorite dessert:
“Let me tell you a little secret. I (hate is such a strong word) am not fond of sweets. But I do like Pinoy “kakanin”: Puto, kutsinta, bibingka, and puto bumbong.”
The desserts he creates to impress the ladies:
“I would make crepes, sweet, and savory alike. Also flurry ones that need not much time for prepping, like ice cream, sorbets, or semifreddo. Making a crepe is quick and easy, thus giving you more time to spend with your significant other. Same goes for the cold ones, just mix/combine the ingredients and pop it in the fridge. Again, more time to cuddle or talk.”
The most elaborate dessert he’s done for a girl:
“I once made a spiced pineapple compote (jam) from scratch and put it on a mason jar. It says on the label ‘Spread a little, then get some for yourself.’”

Chef Jeremy Favia’s  Strawberry Mojito AspicChef Jeremy Favia’s 
Strawberry Mojito Aspic
Ingredients:
1 pack fresh strawberries
1 pack powdered strawberry gelatin
1 fresh lime
1 pack powdered lime gelatin
1 shot of white rum
1 pack unflavored gelatin
1 tsp sugar
Fresh mint leaves
Procedure:
1. Dissolve the packs of powdered gelatin in separate containers accordingly, one container for each flavor. Keep it warm. Dissolve the white rum together with the unflavored gelatin.
2. Slice the fresh strawberries and lime into thin slices and set them aside.
3. Arrange the mint leaves in a mortar and pestle. Add a dash of sugar on top and grind until you get the juices out. This will bring out the fresh flavor of your mint.
4. Put it in a glass container (preferably a rock glass) and alternate the fresh fruits, gelatin, and garnish.
5. Allot roughly around two to three minutes for the gelatin to set before you pour another mixture.
6. May be served with pop rocks (crackling candy) on top as a replacement for the fizz of the usual club soda you put in a mojito.


Chef JP AngloJOSEPH PATRICK ‘JP’ ANGLO, 35
Filipino-Ilonggo restaurant Sarsa owner and Diamond Hotel’s guest chef for its annual food fest, chef JP likes “quick, delicious, and with flair” desserts. To cool off this sizzling summer season, Chef JP prepares a simple treat, melons n’ cream, a fruit salad replete with juicy fruits like watermelon and melon. “Dapat walang complications, parang sa love life,” says the Le Cordon Bleu-trained chef. “You can do this dessert anywhere, anytime you like, with very few ingredients.”
His favorite dessert:
Chef JP doesn’t have a sweet tooth, but he says he likes simple desserts like ice cream sandwich, especially vanilla in a cookie dough and salted caramel.
The desserts he creates to impress the ladies:
Mango jubilee or a mango flambé always works wonders with the ladies. “It’s a tried and tested dessert. Every time I make it, I always get results. Dapat may ‘oh, wow!’ factor eh. Sa ‘oh wow’ may pogi points ka na,” he says with a sheepish smile. A caramelized banana over ice cream, with its cool and hot combination, which stimulates the senses, is an option, too.
The most elaborate dessert he’s done for a girl:
“I won’t do dessert for a girl, maybe with a savory dish because when it’s dessert time, you just want to get it over with and get out of the restaurant or finish the meal. But the main course should be elaborate.”

Chef JP Anglo’s Melons n’ CreamChef JP Anglo’s
Melons n’ Cream
Ingredients:
150g watermelon
150g melon (orange)
150g honey dews
150g sugar, white
50ml water
10ml mint leaves
120g whipped cream
Procedure:
1. Get a baller, a spoon-like device, and scoop out the melons, honeydew, and watermelons.
2. Make simple sugar syrup, and add four drops of pandan extract.
3. Chop mint leaves and throw into sugar syrup. Add in your different melons as well.
4. Serve with whipped cream and a mint leaf on top. Chill before serving.


Chef Rob AngelesROB LOPEZ ANGELES, 31
From a basketball player to a bibingka soufflé maker, Summit Ridge Tagaytay C2 Classic Cuisine head chef Rob has gone places. The Hotel and Restaurant Management student from St. Benilde College has worked in Miami, Florida for five years as a steward then, later on, became a head cook and a sous chef. “You got to start somewhere, you got to start below,” the tall, tattooed chef says. To beat the summer heat, a simple and classic halo-halo, for Rob, is the best option. Incidentally, in C2 Tagaytay’s summer fiesta buffet, you can create your own halo-halo with its DIY bar complete with classic ingredients like ube, langka, and macapuno.
His favorite dessert:
“I like palitaw because it’s very traditional. My mom and lola used to cook it at home. But for me, being a chef doesn’t stop there, you need to learn new concepts, so what I do with my version of palitaw is I put chocolate, Chocnut, or caramel syrup on it.”
The desserts he creates to impress the ladies:
“Bibingka soufflé has a ‘wow’ factor. I’ll make this simple dish to win their hearts because it’s a classic Filipino dish with a French twist. This savory dish has coconut custard, salted egg, lemon zest, queso de bola, and toasted coconut shreds. It looks simple on the outside but the flavors burst once you taste it.
The most elaborate dessert he’s done for a girl:
“I made choco-overload cake with KitKat and M&Ms on it.”

Chef Rob Angeles’ halo-halo Chef Rob Angeles’
halo-halo
Ingredients:
240 g crushed ice
30 ml sago small
60g nata de coco
30 g cooked saba
5g corn flakes
30g macapuno meat
60g red kaong
10 ml arnibal
30 g langka
30 g ube jam
120ml evaporated milk
10 ml condensed milk
30 g leche flan
10 g corn flakes
2 g pinipig
30 ml vanilla ice cream
30 ml ube ice cream
Procedure:
1. Arrange the ingredients according to sequence.
2. Top it with ice cream, pinipig, leche flan, and cornflakes.

rock in silence

Rock in silence

You could hear a pin drop at this recent Bamboo and Ely Buendia concert
If it were the ’90s, and music icon Ely Buendia was on stage singing “Ang Huling El Bimbo” or “Magasin,” partygoers, hipsters, and music lovers would have been shouting at the top of their lungs, running around, jumping, unleashing their inner beast. There would have been boomboxes and heart-thumping noises. There would have been a riot.
But his latest concert costarring another music legend, Bamboo Mañalac, was tamer—no, not tamer, quieter, so quiet in fact you could hear a pin drop. Attendees were head bangin’ in unison and singing along to a song that they alone could hear. It was the country’s first silent concert, sans the noise and the chaos (no need for bouncers!) associated with a rock party such as this one.
Ely and Bamboo were enclosed in a soundproof glass booth, their music transmitted through Sony MDR headphones, like artists recording live music in a studio. “This feels so weird, I cannot hear you guys. I feel like I’m in quarantine,” Bamboo says into his mic before performing “214.” While Bamboo couldn’t hear his audience, but he could see everyone lip-synching, and could feel the energy permeating the glass case where he was confined.
Ely Buendia, Bamboo
THE QUIETEST PARTY IN TOWN Ely Buendia and Bamboo sing their heart out via a soundproof booth where the audience have to wear headphones to hear them.
A Breath of Fresh Air 
In a country where loud rock concerts are held everywhere, anywhere, and anytime, in a city that never sleeps, in a city that is perennially in the middle of the hustle and bustle of jeepneys and crowds, it may be true that we do not know the sound of silence. Or if we ever encounter silence, we run from it, we make noise, we speak, we break something.
But there are times we crave for it—when in prayer, when reading an engaging book at the break of dawn, or when writing a piece of story that needs to be published immediately. Or in the most surprising of examples, in the middle of Ely and Bamboo’s concert dubbed “MDR Live,” which trended as #MusicDeservesRespect. If you hear a song you don’t like, or if only to test if it was indeed a hushed concert, you could turn down the volume of your headphone or completely take it off. Ah, the silence was refreshing. It was a novelty, a breath of fresh air. You could speak normally to your seatmate, who with his headphones on, was singing along to Bamboo’s “Tatsulok.”

Headphone Concerts and Hush Hush Parties
Headphone concerts, silent clubs, and hush-hush parties started in the early ’90s. In the heady days of the club era, eco-activists advocated the use of headphones and earphones at parties to lessen the noise pollution. But the first Aha! moment, according to Wordvia website, originated in 1997, from the creative mind of Parisian Erik Minkkinen when he live-streamed a concert over the Internet from the comforts of his home. Three people from Japan were believed to be his first listeners. Two years later, Erik initiated the Le Placard nomadic festival, again, right smack in the comfort of his apartment, where his bigger audience used headphones. This attracted a worldwide following with the novelty of conducting concerts anywhere they fancy. International bands like Metallica, Rocketgoldstar, and The Flaming Lips, to name a few, followed suit. In 2011, the Oxford Dictionary online added the term “silent disco,” a Brit phrase to mean “an event at which people dance to music that is transmitted through wireless headphones rather than played over a speaker system.”

Craving for More
Author Norton Juster in the book Phantom Tollbooth asks us, do we ever hear the silence before dawn?  “Or perhaps, you know, the silence when you have no answer to a question you’ve been asked, or the hush of a country road at night, or the expectant pause of a room full of people when someone is just about to speak, or, most beautiful of all, the moment after the door closes and you’re alone in the house?”
Do we know what silence means?
In between periods of calm at the concert, there were hoots and cheers and claps and clinks of wine bottles, with Ely and Bamboo in high spirits. Then there was none, there was silence again, as everybody went back to listening through headphones. While we cannot stop the music and the noise, what we need are extra servings of hush-hush parties and silent concerts. We want more! www.sony.com.ph

Saturday, May 10, 2014

the other mother

The other mother

Because Mom isn’t always the one who brought us out into the world
Mama literally means breast. While on those bosoms our body and soul are nourished, being a mother does not only refer to a biological mom alone, or she who can provide milk for her young. There are different types of moms, who, too, need salutation this Mother’s Day.

MEET THE MUDRABELLS
Mark Sablan plays a dual role to his four-year-old daughter, Sadako. He can be her father, and he can play her mama, too. “My daughter Sadako is close to her mom as well, but I think there are aspects when I am more of a mom to her than her real mom,” says Mark, an unfazed member of the third sex.
They like playing Barbie dress-up, which includes makeovers, games, and fashion shows, with the mall as their runway. And oh, they love watching beauty pageants. “Especially the swimsuit portion,” he says, laughing. “We pretend we’re finalists although she’s the only one who changes into her swimsuit.”“I introduce her to divas and girl groups and we enjoy singing and dancing to their songs, as in complete with Beyonce choreography,” says Mark, who’s into fashion and styling/
But being a beki mom has its downsides, although they are workable, even more than a regular mother experiences. Macy Santos, not his real name, says, “While we bekis did not give birth to our children, we love our kids just the same, or even more. In our case, we face different difficulties, perhaps even graver than a mother’s.” His adopted daughter is turning five years old.
In a highly conservative society, where males are expected to be tough and to be the haligi ng tahanan (foundations of a home), beki moms are condemned and judged just because they have opted to play the mother role. But the hardest part of their unusual parent-kid relationship, the stage when kids can voice out their questions, Macy and Mark both agree, is the most difficult. Questions like “How will I explain the situation when she grows up? Will she understand?  Will she accept me?” hunt them almost every day.
“I think it’s not that complicated yet since my daughter is still very young, but I know it will be challenging when she’s a little older.” Mark admits. “I am trying to raise her, however, as an open-minded individual so she can be ready, and just so she knows how to accept and appreciate everyone.”
More than the issue of acceptance, the challenge of beki moms is proving their worth as a parent.
“I’ve always thought I could be a good parent,” Mark says, “My parents gave me a great childhood and raised me the best way they could, so I’ve always wanted to have my own kids and be a great parent to them the way my parents have been to me.”
Macy, on the other hand, adopted his child for companionship. “I want somebody to grow old with, so we can take care of each other,” he admits. But more than being just a “selfish” act, he says he also wanted a child he could love and care for.
Before you raise your eyebrows and question their capacity to nurture a child, remember that gay couples, too, have innate maternal instinct. Remember the late Jun Encarnacion? The hairdresser raised a good brood, including Tristan, who is one of today’s most respected chefs.
Gay couple adoptions have tripled in number in the last 10 years, according to Kelli Kennedy, who writes about the phenomenon in The Huffington Post.  Gay parents like Filipino entrepreneur Joel Cruz, and Hollywood celebrities Neil Patrick Harris and Ricky Martin all have cute twins and have publicly vowed to love and nurture their kids, just like all other similarly devoted beki moms.

LOLA MAMITA, MOMMY LOU
Having Lola as a mom also has its hitches. Meet Lally Contreras. Her mother is not an overseas worker. Her mama, in fact, is a homemaker. But Lally says that growing up, she has always listened to and treated her Lola as a mom. “I don’t know why but I grew closer to my lola mamita than to my mother,” says Lally. On her 18th birthday, Lally’s lola mamita and her dad danced with her in the traditional 18 dances, her mom did not. Though the situation may seem awkward and weird from the outside looking in, Lally’s comfortable with the situation and treats it like it’s the most common kind of relationship.
Such was the relationship between Ieth Inolino, 29, and her lola Lydia Tatoy, whom she fondly called Mommy Lou. “She was my everything,” Ieth says. “She was my superwoman, my father, my mother, rolled into one. I could not have asked for more.” Ieth grew up under her Mommy Lou’s supervision when she was only two months old, after her parents from Negros Oriental left her with her maternal grandmother for safekeeping. “I was sick that time when they gave me to my lola. They said I would be better off staying in Binondo.” It took a long time before her parents came back for her. “I was about to go to high school, and I passed Manila Science High School,” she says, opting to stay in Manila. Ieth’s Mommy Lou and Mama Lyrie, an aunt she considered her second mother (after Mommy Lou), more than made up for the absence of Ieth’s parents. Like Lally, Ieth loves her biological mother, but she considers the woman who raised her her real mom.  “I could not imagine myself living another life,” she says. “When you have one person who is consistent in your life, you feel anchored and assured.”
It all boils down to the true essence of parenting, of being a mother. Anyone, after all, can give birth, but not everyone can be a mother.