No one can SPREAD THE LOVE like Butch Garcia can!

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Butchay spreads spreadcrackers SpreadTheLove@CHub

When Butch Garcia first created his Alugbati Spread to share with friends, I was skeptical. Alugbati? Really? That obsequious and ordinary plant that grows wild in gardens and empty lots? The spread looked extremely green! But the moment I tasted it, it blew away all prejudices. It was an extraordinarily delicious surprise to the palate — rich and luscious and flavorful! Not at all as grassy as I imagined alugbati would taste. In fact, it reminded me of Cibo’s Spinaci Zola dip, but fuller-flavored.

Butch’s Alugbati Spread came about one day when he wanted to do a pesto sauce. However, that day, he could not find any basil anywhere with which to make it. Not in the supermarkets, not in the delis, not even in anyone’s garden. Ever the inventive mind and impeccable palate, Butch decided to use alugbati instead. Makes sense — it is, in many ways, our local equivalent of basil.

The instant acceptance and exuberant appreciation of his Alugbati Spread inspired Butch to develop other delectable spread ideas. His next product was his Quezo de Bola Pimiento Spread, which was his grandmother’s recipe, tweaked and perfected according to his supremely fine-tuned taste. That, too, was an immediate success. Salty, cheesy, but with umami depth. From then on, Butch’s concoctions have expanded to other spread creations — Smoked Round Scad Spread (or Tinapang Galunggong), Longganiza, Pineapple-Cashew, and “Bicol Express”.

The “Bicol Express” is one of my pinaka-favorites! The heat is subtle, tempered by the cream and dissembled by the bread or cracker. But the combined piquancy of Hungarian sausages and the jalapeño and cayenne peppers soon unfurls gradually in the mouth with every flavorsome bite. It goes absolutely perfectly with ice-cold beer or very chilled wine.

The popularity of his spreads, well, have spread like wild fire! Simply through the power of social media and gratified friends’ word of mouth. “Spread the love!”, Butch would say, with his customary chuckle. And it was his very own words which became the brand name for his spreads, upon the suggestion of his fellow-foodie friend in advertising, Ana Perez. His daughter Belai and her best friend Andi Harn came up with the design of the label — congenial, honest, warm, and down-to-earth. Seeing it will make you smile. Tasting his spreads will make you swoon in joy. And it is with joy that I simply must share with you what Butch’s SPREAD THE LOVE spreads are all about … whilst snacking on the Bicol Express on skyflakes crackers.

People from the film and advertising industries know Butch Garcia not just as one of the country’s most prominent production designers, but also as a supreme connoisseur of good food with a big appetite and a big heart. And it’s only right that his array of delicious homemade spreads be called SPREAD THE LOVE. It is, after all, everything that Butch Garcia is all about.

Here is how to order any (or all) of the SPREAD THE LOVE spreads: ButchayMenu

Food for thought. Food for love.

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These days when our brothers and sisters are in the midst of devastation wrought by supertyphoon Yolanda, desperate for food and water and other basic essentials, the last thing I would want to do is write about food. It almost feels like a crime to write about good food or anything indulgent. So let me share instead these posters from restaurants and F&B groups who are donating their profits in the coming days to the suffering survivors in the Visayas. Yeah, in a way patronizing these efforts can help ease the guilt of being able to enjoy good food, but know at least that whatever you spend goes to helping the survivors.

Oh, Toro!

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Toro means a live sex show, in Filipino slang. In foodie language, though, Toro is the Japanese word for the fatty belly of the tuna. And is it better than sex? Hm, I don’t know about that but it sure can come as a close second!

Otoro — cut from the lower belly of the tuna towards the head. Priceless!

Otoro — cut from the lower belly of the tuna towards the head. Priceless!

The toro is traditionally classified into grades, depending on the marbling of the meat, in much the same way that beef is graded. And the most premium, most desired, and most expensive part of the toro is the otoro, which is cut from the underside of the fish close to the head, preferably taken from the bluefin tuna. It is so expensive that otoro is seldom found in the menus of local ordinary Japanese restaurants. I first experienced the divine deliciousness of the otoro at Azami (on Pasay Road, Makati). One order of it, which is only about 5 pieces of sashimi, can set you back by around P2,000.00! Each pop in your mouth is 400-bucks! But, omigod, I say it’s worth every peso! Otoro is so creamy-rich and delicious that it epitomizes that incredible melt-in-your-mouth yumminess. The texture and the flavor are so far from the typical tuna sashimi you’ve ever tasted, trust me. The difference, of course, lies in the fat. Otoro is pink (not red, like the akami or maguro cut), with discernible white lines of fatty tissue cutting across it. Think liempo with layers of belly fat in between the meat. It is definitely worth experiencing, even just once in your food-loving life.

Akami — less marbled and firmer in texture, it comes from the area around the tuna's spine and tail. It used to be the most prized cut around 90 years ago ... until OTORO!

Akami — less marbled and firmer in texture, it comes from the area around the tuna’s spine and tail. It used to be the most prized cut around 90 years ago … until OTORO!

Spicy Tuna Sashimi

Spicy Tuna Sashimi

Amazing Grace Park

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Grace Park, named after the family compound in Caloocan City, is located at One Rockwell, Makati

Grace Park, named after the family compound in Caloocan City, is located at One Rockwell, Makati

I usually avoid posting my takes on restaurants, mainly because most of the restaurants lack consistency — whether in service quality, in food taste or preparation, or whatever. One time my dining experience would be faultless, but the next time if it’s not one downer, it’s another. Consistency in delivering the best of their food with irreproachable service is a quality seldom found in many restaurants these days. But there is one restaurateur whose standards in cuisine, service, and restaurant design have remained impeccably consistent through all her many restaurants and through her many years in the food business. That’s Margarita Fores. And her latest restaurant endeavour, Grace Park, did not disappoint or falter.

2nd floor Interiors

2nd floor Interiors

Grace Park is located on the ground floor of One Rockwell, along Rockwell Drive at Rockwell Center in Makati. Its name comes from a once-posh area in Caloocan City where Gaita’s grandfather had their family compound and where the family would gather ’round on Sundays for leisurely meals together. The cuisine has been described as farm-to-table, artisanal Italian. In one Inquirer article, Fores says that “Grace Park is a back-to-basics concept. Aside from picking things from seed to plate and from earth to fork, it celebrates the organic produce of our farmers and artisan producers here and abroad. It honors the old ways of doing things, like slow-food cooking techniques.

Deep-fried Squash Flowers wrapped in Prosciutto

Deep-fried Squash Flowers wrapped in Prosciutto

Baked Scallops from Capiz. So fresh, it's sea-sweet!

Baked Scallops from Capiz. So fresh, it’s sea-sweet!

Spaghettini with Uni, Live Shrimp, Wine Tomatoes, and Rucola (Arugula)

Spaghettini with Uni, Live Shrimp, Wine Tomatoes, and Rucola (Arugula)

Roasted Bone Marrow, made famous in Gaita Fores's Pepato

Roasted Bone Marrow, made famous in Gaita Fores’s Pepato

Grilled Lamb Ribs

Grilled Lamb Ribs

Roasted Apahap (Philippine Sea Bass), the fresh catch of the day

Roasted Apahap (Philippine Sea Bass), the fresh catch of the day

The OMG Burger! Humongous! With two premium-beef patties, crispy bacon, cheese, and caramelized onions.

The OMG Burger! Humongous! With two premium-beef patties, crispy bacon, cheese, and caramelized onions.

OMG! It's so gigantic, you could share with 3-4 people!

OMG! It’s so gigantic, you could share with 3-4 people!

It goes without saying that you can expect a restaurant this great to be fully booked at most times, so be sure to reserve a table. Call the cellphone number +(63 939)-9347223 or the landline 843-PARK (7275).

My one question about the design, though, is … “What’s with the black cats?”

The Discovery of Recovery

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Recovery Food at the Fort

Recovery Food at the Fort

Hey Jude Paksig

Hey Jude Paksig

Tapa De Morning

Tapa De Morning

My late evening "breakfast"

My late evening “breakfast”

Everyone had each had a long day at work and simple, tummy-satisfying, good and delicious Pinoy comfort food was what we all wanted. And that’s what you get at The Recovery Food — at the ground floor of Crossroads Bldg (across MC Home Depot), at the corner of 32nd St. and 8th Avenue at the Fort.

Owned by Malou Fores of Mamou fame, the Recovery Food is what you could call a modern and upscale carinderia, with its no-frills menu. The place is pretty tiny, very simply and sparsely interiored, but the food is big in flavor. Open 24/7, it was originally conceived to cater to late-night salarymen and habitués who are looking for good Pinoy comfort food to help them “recover” from a long stressful day or from a night of alcoholic binging. A few may even want to call it “stoner food”. Of course they have rice toppings — such as Ah! Dobo! (adobo, of course), SST (spicy-sweet tuyô), Tapa de Morning (special tapsilog), all served with organic rice — your choice of brown or white — and egg — your choice of how you want it cooked. If you’re feeling fearless, choose talangka rice. But they also have noodle soups, sandwiches, and desserts. Unfortunately, they do not accept reservations, so be patient if you have to wait for a table. There is almost always a long queue, even at midnight, so you simply have to trust your luck to get a table right away. But the food is well worth the wait.

To Marrow, To Marrow, I love ya…

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Bone marrow! Yes, that creamy, silky-rich, slightly sweet treasure made up of fat and collagen that’s found inside the bones, preferably long and large bones. Filipinos are partial to beef bone marrow and call it bulaló. The shank bone, with meat still clinging to it, is boiled for hours until the beef broth is rich and flavorful. The marrow nestling deep inside the bone stays firm yet it is so soft that it melts in the mouth. I learned to love it when my family would visit our relatives in Tanauan, Batangas. My brothers and I, to this day, fight over the bone marrow in the Nilaga, despite the spikes in our cholesterol levels.

I did not think that bulaló or bone marrow could be even more addicting and delicious until I discovered Chef J Gamboa’s Roasted Bone Marrow at El Cirkulo. Smear a good dollop on toast, then drizzle with rock salt and parsley and pair with an amazing beef molé asado. Oh my Lord, that was an exquisite Eureka moment for me!

And recently, I tried Gaita Fores’s Roasted Bone Marrow — it was sooooo divine, I could have died from the cholesterol and gone to foodie heaven! The bones are cut vertically (the more easily to scoop you up, my dear) and served with toasted herbed ciabatta. I would have preferred a slightly thinner, blander toast — the better to savor the buttery umami of the marrow to the utmost. But I did love it paired with the siding of portobello truffle pesto. It was one of her classic dishes at her restaurant Pepato, but now one can enjoy this dish at Fores’s Grace Park bistro at One Rockwell.

Needless to say, the charming Grace Park is always full to the rafters, so it’s best to reserve. Call these numbers: 0939 9347223 / 843 7275. More about this bistro in another post. Or you can check out their facebook at https://www.facebook.com/pages/GRACE-PARK/129956300517869

For the meantime, let us sing “to marrow, to marrow, I love ya, bone marrow…”

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Merienda of the Day – Truffe Noire Cheese

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Truffle Noire and Manchego + Fruits

Truffe Noire and Manchego + Fruits

My latest cheesy discovery is the Truffe Noire Cheese — creamy Gouda cheese studded with bits of black Italian summer truffles. A little pricey but definitely worth it! The first time I bit into the cheese… hmmm, yes, I detect that delicate taste of the truffles… Then I bit on a grape with the cheese still in my mouth and… Oh.My.God! suddenly, that distinctive, decadently earthy and umami-licious truffle flavor exploded in my mouth! It was pure gustatory ecstasy!

I’m saving half of the slab to make Truffe Noire Steak for dinner. I can already imagine how exquisite that would be — perfectly cooked rib-eye or porterhouse topped with crumbled Truffe Noir Cheese to melt over the steak while it rests! Paired with a lovely Bordeaux — I think that would be just about heavenly, wouldn’t you agree?

Merienda for the Day — Grapes and Chili’d Cheese

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My favorite merienda these days is a plate of sweet seedless grapes and cheese studded with super-spicy chilli bits! That fantastic combination of tart-sweet fruit and salty-creamy cheese literally peppered with minced jalapenños, cayenne, and other hot chilis is a party in the mouth. Ever since I discovered Red Hot Dutch Edam Cheese With Chili Peppers, I’ve been hooked. No, not your run-of-the-mill cheese pimiento! Far from it. This is red-hot, blast-your-palate spicy!  And it’s a just-right snack that leaves my tummy satisfied without killing my appetite for dinner.
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Be a Smart Cook…ie

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After a lifetime mastering the art of eating well, learning how to cook… and cook well or at least cooking well enough for the food to be edible… is a joyful adventure. I love cooking with my cast-iron pan, mainly because they retain heat well and cooking temperatures stay even and consistent. So no well-done food on one side and raw on the other unless I screw-up majorly, that is. Unfortunately, I’ve had a pan or two damaged by my yaya who can’t believe that she should not scrub and wash the pan with soap after it’s used. So I end up buying a new one every few years. But with proper care, a really good and solid cast-iron pan can give great cooking pleasure for many many years… even generations.cast-iron care

http://bcove.me/p89zdsa6

There are more smart cooking tips at the RealAge website… like how to keep the freshness of one’s herbs… for wanna-bes like me (and perhaps you, too?) who dream of being a smart cook…ie. [-ิ_•ิ]

http://www.realage.com/videos/?bclid=5030525001&bctid=16650836001freshherbs