Friday, November 15, 2013

babangon ako

     naitanong ko sa sarili ko, at sinikap kong sagutin: pano babangon ang mga nasalanta ng yolanda?  sumulat ako ng isang awit kung saan sinikap kong bigyang katugunan ang pagtatanong ng isipan ko: simpleng alay ko sa mga sumapit ng kalunos-lunos na trahedya.  paglalarawan din ito ng sinapit ng mahal nating bansa.    

pasakalye: C-

C              Em
   "saan ka  pupunta
F                             C
   kung walang mapupuntahan?
E7                   Am
   saan mo hahanapin
             F       D7         G7
ang pag-asa ng    kinabukasan?"


C            Em
   ako ay nagising
F                          C
   sa masamang panaginip
E7                     Am
   wala akong makita
              F   D7                G7 
kundi pinsala    sa aking paligid!


C                 Em
   ako ay nag-iisa
F                              C
   wala kahit isang pamilya
E7               Am 
   ano ang gagawin?ha - 
   F                D7              G7
ayaw ko na'ng    mabuhay pa!


koro:

Am                     D7
      baba - ngon ako!
Am                       D7
      haha - napin ko ang daan
Am                 D7
      lala - kad ako!
Am                                    D7 
      haha - nggang aking matagpuan
      F                Em       F                G7
ang bagong pag-asa ng aking kinabukasan

(ulitin ang koro:)
(gawin ang pasakalye:)


C                   Em
   salamat sa inyo
F                  C
   lahat ng kaibigan ko
E7                         Am
   di nyo ako pinabayaan
     F            D7                  G7
maraming salamat sa tulong nyo!


C                  Em
   ako ay nag-iisa
F                             C
   wala kahit isang pamilya
E7                Am
   ngunit nasisilayan ko na
   F          D7                  G7     
liwanag ng    bagong pag-asa!

(ulitin ang koro: 2 beses hanggang maglaho)

Wednesday, November 13, 2013

yolanda

     

     time stands still in tacloban, and elsewhere where the unforgiving fury of "yolanda" was unleashed.  O, what a regal name - yolanda - for such a cold-hearted warrior who dashed both children and elderly alike to the ground with no remorse!  i witness the aftermath, the devastation.  i witness the howling tempest of "yolanda" only through the news channels and facebook, only days after the cataclysm.  i wasn't there myself.

     i grew up in a flood prone area in manila: as a kid, i played in the flooded street of maria clara in sampaloc along with my friends.  i recall my friends and i taking a detached roof of a jeepney and turning it upside-down into a boat, we frolicked through the floods.  typhoons, super typhoons and floods were part of my normal life.  they come, they go: i lived with that, i took that for granted.

     rumbles, brawls and word arguments escalating into fisticuffs were also commonplace in the streets where i grew up.  they were also part of my normal life, growing up in that area; though i was never a part of any of the violence, i was an "uzi" to all the rough and tumble: my blood rushes through my veins in excitement when i watch trouble brewing.  i smile at the storm.

     with this frame of mind, had i been in any of the sorry places where "yolanda" wielded her contemptuous sword, i might have become a casualty: dead.  i would probably have been curious as to what a storm surge was and waited until the last moment on the shore when i saw the water bulge and swell before i ran to higher ground - if i had earlier thought of that escape plan - like the man i saw on the video who got chased by the storm surge and ran as fast as he could and jumped to the trunk of a nearby tree.  i don't know if he escaped the mini-tsunami: the video was cut after he leaped to the tree trunk.

     probably like many others, i would have told my wife and kids that our house was strong enough to withstand a typhoon, or for that matter, a super-typhoon: we've been through hundreds of that.  i would have awakened jaded and distraught, or would not have awakened at all: dead.

     the worst that have hit us of recent years was the "habagat" - in fact, both "habagat" of august 2012 and 2103.  but the worst part of it was that the flood waters have gone into our house and inundated the back rooms and both bedrooms... ankle-deep!  would we have been hit by a super typhoon of "yolanda's" ferocity, (i have no doubt) our roof would fly off our house in a huff and every item inside our house fly off with a puff, and we would end up all wet, bruised and wounded, fearful and tearful, jaded and distraught: or dead. 


     where would the poor fisherfolk that lived near the shorelines have gone to evacuate?  the fish ball vendor?  i suppose nowhere safe from the cruel screaming rage of "yolanda". 

     the next time a typhoon of "yolanda's" proportions develops over the pacific and is heading towards where i live, i will not smile at the storm.  

     i have learned my humble lesson: prepare or prepare to die.

Wednesday, November 6, 2013

3-chili pinoy hot pot

     

     we were booked on a flight to legazpi city (albay) tomorrow, thursday, nov.7, but we cancelled the trip due to the incoming super typhoon, "yolanda".  those of us who are now in their late forties or early fifties couldn't escape associating this with the 1970's howler, "yoling" - a name that remains of what we remember about super typhoons when we were growing up.

     bicolandia, (of which legazpi city is a part of), of course, is well-known for its ginataan dishes.  although, i'm not too sure if this pinoy hot pot is a bicolandia dish.  but it has gata and sili - a mainstay in bicolandia food.

     so, if we cannot go to bicolandia, we will let bicolandia come to us!

     gear up for "yolanda" - be safe, everybody!

     ingredients:
     1/2 kilo pork belly, sliced into bite-size cuts
     20 strands, string beans or sitaw, cut into 2-inch segments

     3/4 cup kakang gata of 1 niyog, grated
     2-3 cups ikialawang gata of same niyog
       
     6 cloves garlic, peeled and crushed
     1 large onion, peeled and sliced
     1 thumb-size ginger, whacked on kitchen tile with flat side of kitchen knife
     (or something to that effect)
     3 siling labuyo or any red sili
     2 tsps bagoong alamang
     1/2 tsps patis
     dash of salt and pepper

     procedure:
     PUT ikalawang gata, garlic, onion, ginger, siling labuyo, bagoong alamang, and patis in a wok or saucepan
     BOIL 1 minute
     ADD pork slices
     SIMMER until liquid is reduced to half its original quantity
     ADD string beans
     SIMMER for about 10 minutes or until desired softness of string beans is achieved
     ADD kakang gata
     BOIL for 1 minute
     (ADD water if more sauce is desired.)
     ADD salt and pepper to suit taste.

     serve warm with rice.

good eats !!!

Tuesday, November 5, 2013

banana-oatmeal pancakes

   

     i am not a pancakes type of person.  my wife is - pancakes are a comfort food to her.  she regularly buys pancake mixes at the supermarket to have something at hand in the cupboard when the need arises.
     i usually make her banana-oatmeal pancakes when i have leftover bananas, milk, and eggs from baking - when there are orders for banana cakes.  the rest of the ingredients, viz., sugar, oil - we always have.

     doesn't require a degree in astro-physics to get this one right the first time...

     in a bowl, COMBINE 
     1-1/4 cup ALL-PURPOSE FLOUR 
     1/2 cup OATS 
     2 Tbsp BAKING POWDER (yes, Tablespoons) 
     1/4 tsp. salt 
     1 tsp. CINNAMON (optional).

     in a separate bowl, COMBINE 
     1 EGG 
     1-1/4 cup MILK 
     1 Tbsp OIL

     ADD the EGG MIXTURE to the FLOUR MIXTURE and BLEND WELL
     DO NOT OVERMIX
     ADD 2-3 pcs RIPE BANANAS (MASHED) and MIX until WELL BLENDED

     place skillet or griddle in medium-low heat 
     grease lightning, ah, eh, i meant, grease lightly
     pour approx. 1/4 cup batter onto griddle or skillet
     when bubbles start to appear, turn pancake over
     watch pancake rise
     makes 4-6 pancakes

     serve with butter, syrup, fruit preserves or fresh fruit 

good eats !!!
   
   

Friday, August 30, 2013

lemongrass chicken nilaga


     i will be trimming my lemongrass plant which has grown very lush and so i asked who among my friends would want to have some.  a handful "raised their hands" (well, it was an fb status post and a handful commented that they wanted some) and so i will be giving away about 20 bulbs for both planting and cooking.  

     one of those who asked also asked if there was a recipe to go with the lemongrass.  well, here it is: SERVES TWO hungry tummies !!!

500 grams chicken legs (2 pcs)
4 cloves garlic crushed
2 medium sized onions sliced
4 bulbs leeks, white parts sliced
2 bulbs lemongrass


500 grams potato, peeled and quartered
4 leaves cabbage (whole leaves)
150 grams carrots (medium size) julienned
100 grams baguio beans
1/2 cup kernel corn

     this takes some rocket science to do:

PAN FRY chicken until brown.  reduce oil to about 2 tablespoons (chicken still in pan).


ADD garlic, onions, and leeks and continue frying in medium fire.
ADD 1 liter water and bring to a BOIL.
ADD lemongrass and potato.
BOIL and reduce heat to medium.


REMOVE potato from the soup.
MASH potato in a small bowl.
SET ASIDE.

SCOOP cooked spices (garlic, onion and leeks) with about 1 cup of soup stock and put in a blender.
BLEND with 1/2 tsp patis and 1/2 tsp kalamansi.
SET ASIDE.

ADD kernel corn to soup.
SIMMER until served.

BLANCHE cabbage.
DRAIN cabbage. 
MOLD 2 cabbage leaves in a small bowl leaving edges outside the bowl.
(BLANCHE carrots and baguio beans while doing this procedure.)
FILL cabbage leaves with the mashed potato.
FOLD OVER the edges of the cabbage on the mashed potato.
TURN OVER on the side of plate.
REPEAT MOLD, FILL, FOLD OVER and TURN OVER for other serving.


DRAIN carrots and baguio beans.
ARRANGE carrots and baguio beans on center of plate.
PLACE chicken on top of carrots and baguio beans.
POUR blended spices on chicken and vegetables.
SERVE with the soup.



 good eats !!!  =D

Saturday, August 3, 2013

fish fillet with mushroom in oyster sauce


     There are a number of items that always come in handy and very useful - if you have them in your kitchen cabinet - if you enjoy cooking quick stir-fry (chinese) dishes: a bottle of good (cooking) rice wine, a bottle (or packet) of oyster sauce, soy sauce, sesame seed oil, peanut oil (if you can afford it, and if no one in your family is allergic to peanuts), garlic, ginger root, chilis (or chili flakes).  If you have these, you can stir-fry anything you want - anything you can eat.

     Fish fillet goes well with almost any vegetable, mushroom, or vegetable-mushroom stir-fry.  Simply pan fry the fish fillet, then either top it with whatever vegetable you stir-fry or top the vegetable stir-fry with the fried fish fillet - any way you want it!

     My mixed vegetables was topped with fried fish fillet.  But with this recipe it's the other way around, the fried fish fillet is topped with the stir-fry mushroom.

     500 grams fish fillet.  Pan fry (shallow oil).  Drain and set aside.  
    
     Saute 2 cloves garlic crushed and 1/2 teaspoon crushed ginger (optional) in oil.
     (Add chilis or chili flakes at this point.)
     Add mushroom and continue frying in high heat for half a minute to a minute.
     Add 2 teaspoons rice wine.  Flame (optional).
     Add 2 teaspoons oyster sauce, 1/2 teaspoon sugar, 1/4 teaspoon sesame oil.
     Stir well then turn off heat.
     Set fish on platter.
     Top with stir-fry mushrooms.
     Serves two.

good eats !!!

Thursday, August 1, 2013

ilocos 2013 - day 2

     As I write this, I have been overtaken by a lot of events, by every other thing except the neighborhood turtle.  Pa'ano oras mga langaw : How time flies. 

First Stop: Vigan, Ilocos Sur, home to the Heritage Village... and Brother Vio. 

     As usual, we left around 9 am.  It was for a small reason : the “boss” of Tess, her three year old son, Kendong.   

Kendong

Blah, blah, blah...  Off we go to Vigan, windows down, the wind blowing on our faces.

     We met with Vio, we were soooo late, but Vio was very gracious in accommodating us in his very busy schedule.  We discussed a couple of church issues and asked directions to the various places we had planned to visit.  We also asked him where we could get our hands on the popular Vigan empanada.



First Stop in Vigan: Baluarte. 

     The animals here are quite friendly.  

No Angry Birds here

They’ve probably gotten used to the backward pace of life in the region.  Meet "Sleepy Hoof". 

Sleepy Hoof

There was a Tiger, but it was in chains... in the background, quasimodo!

Jane (foreground) and the Tiger (background)

But beware!  The Velociraptor isn't that welcoming!

Look out !!!


Next Stop in Vigan: Heritage Village. 


Picturesque View of Calle Crisologo

     When in Vigan, ask where McDo is and you will find yourself a few step away from Vigan Empanada any way you want it!  (The Heritage Village in Calle Crisologo is just a couple of blocks away.)

     The Vigan Empanada is made with a flour dough rolled to a circle (1/8-inch thin and 8-inches in diameter); it is then filled with cabbage coleslaw, crumbled longganisa, and a raw egg yolk; then the dough is folded over the filling to make a half-circle and the edges are sealed; then it is deep-fried in hot oil.  The finished product has a yellowish crunchy crust, with a creamy, spicy, meaty and veggity filling - it is very, very oily!  Dip your empanada in spiced vinegar and you’ve gotten through one mouthful Vigan experience.


     The Heritage Village proved (to me) to be (partly) a let down - dampened nostalgia.  The restored relics of houses that lined Calle Crisologo were distinctly marked by a lot of modern improvisations, e.g. split-type air-conditioners, aluminum-glass jalousies, unpainted wall “palitada” and ballast-type fluorescent tubes hanging on strings outside the time-worn brick walls and age-old hardwood window frames and door jambs.  It was a souvenir market, left and right.





     There was a stop we needed to make on our way back to Ilocos Norte.  It was another one of those relic bell towers we passed by on our way to the Sur - the Masingal Bell Tower outside the Masingal Museum.

Masingal Bell Tower outside the Masingal Museum


Second Stop: Paoay, Ilocos Norte.


     There were still a couple of places we need to go to before the daylight receded - San Agustin Church and Malacanang of the North.

San Agustin Church

San Agustin Church Bell Tower

Third Stop: Malacanang of the North.

     We were told by the tourist guide stationed at the tourist hut on the lawns of San Agustin Church that the Malacanang of the North closes at 6 pm.  We had ample time - it was just before 5 pm and Malacanang was only about 20 minutes away.

     But we had to make a stop - a photo stop - a 3-minute photo stop at the scenic Paoay Lake.

Scenic Paoay Lake

     Run and gun, we were off to Malacanang in a huff.

     "Drat... and double drat!" said Dick Dastardly.  Malacanang closes at 5 pm, and not at 6 pm as we were told at the tourist desk at San Agustin Church.  Blind guides!  We made PR the guard at the gate to let us in, then we made PR the cashier (shooing us away with the motion of her hands when we were still about 50 meters away from her) who collects the P30- entrance fee at the door and the guard (also shooing us away with the wave of his hands) guarding the cashier and all the money that the cashier collected for the day.   Blah, blah, blah... 
    
The Cashier and the Guard no longer at the door.
     The guard who was shooing us away earlier was (a bit later) kind enough to regard us as tourists and toured us through all the rooms of the big house.

Not the Oval Office


Jane fascinated by the antique wooden closets


Children's Bedroom

Scenic view of Paoay Lake from a window
 
     What can I say?  I didn't really want to go there, but what the heck!

OK na rin !!!

     Fort Ilocandia Resort was along the way going back to Fort "Valdez" Ilocandia in Sarat so we took a swing at the place and found the shiny red floor tiles concretely antiquarian.  We weren't allowed to go near the pool.

Fort Ilocandia Resort (FIR)

     We had an early dinner at a grilled-chicken house a bit before it got dark, and planned to rest a while upon reaching home, pack our bags and take a shower before leaving for the airport which was half an hours drive away.  Plenty of time since our flight was at 2200H or 10:00 pm and it was only 7:40 pm.

     When Jane checked our tickets for the flight schedule, she asked me what time 2030H was because that was the time printed under DEPARTURE - 8:30 pm, I said.  It was now 7:50 pm.  2200H was under ARRIVAL.  The clock was now ticking... LOUDLY!  But it was not yet 20 Minutes Before Take-off!

     We threw all caution to the winds, packed our bags, and in 5 minutes we were gone... for good!  My heart was pounding out of my chest!  No, not really.  But it was one of those "panic modes" when you wished you had taken PAL instead of Cebu Pacific - because PAL is Plane Always Late, and I was praying that our flight would be delayed.  Ok, it was delayed.

     And so while awaiting - almost an hour! - the anti-climactic arrival of our airplane, I began writing the blog in Jane's blueberry... ok, ok! blackberry.


Wednesday, July 31, 2013

mixed vegetables with fish fillet


     yesterday, i visited amor, my good friend, elder brother, mentor, lawyer, brew buddy - you name it, he's it!  he will be gone for six weeks on a trip to the u.s.a. and i needed to talk to him about a couple of very important matters.

     "i will be arriving around lunch time," i texted him.  "fine," he replied, "you cook!"  "ok, then bring out all the ingredients i need," i texted back.

     he had a carrot, some baguio beans and part of a cabbage head brought out of the refrigerator.  hmm... "do you have oyster sauce?" i asked his wife, vivian.  "oh yes," she answered.  "rice wine?"  "yes!"  "sesame oil?"  "yes!"  "i'll need a bit of sugar. too."  one by one vivian took each of them out of one of many kitchen cabinets.

     "perfect!"
   
     amor took out a couple of glasses, put rocks in each of them and poured something from a short and stout bottle he took out of a silver colored box.  the resshht, asshh you knoww, iish hhischtorry, hic !

     why did the cabbage run out of the casino?  he quit while he was still a head (ahead) !!!

     you may need:
     half to three-fourths head of cabbage (sliced medium-size)
     a sayote (sliced into bite-size pices)
     50 grams baguio beans (sliced into bite-size segments)
     a carrot (sliced into flower shapes)
     about 3 stems celery (sliced into bite-size segments; include the leaves)
     2 teaspoons vegetable oil
     3 cloves garlic, crushed
     1-2 teaspoons rice wine
     1-2 tablespoons oyster sauce
     1-2 teaspoons soy sauce
     1/2 teaspoon sugar
     1/2 teaspoon sesame oil

     500 grams fish fillet (sliced into bite-size pieces for frying).  i use frabelle brand cream dory.

     this is how it's done:
     1) pan fry fish fillet.  drain excess oil and set aside.
     2) saute garlic in vegetable oil.
     3) add baguio beans and carrots and cook in high heat for 1-2 minutes.
     4) add rice wine (and flame - optional)
     5) add sayote, celery and cabbage and cook for 3 minutes.
     6) add oyster sauce, soy sauce and sugar and stir well into the vegetables.
     7) turn off heat.
     8) add sesame oil and mix well.
     9) serve on platter.
   10) top with fried fish fillet.

good eats !!!

Wednesday, July 24, 2013

humba

     i was getting a bit depressed because of a headache (related to a cough) that persisted, when my mind was turned to a food remedy.  we had fried daing na bangus and kalabasa in coconut cream soup for lunch, and my wife, jane, and my daughter, jikki, were having their afternoon snack: a couple of banana-Qs and turons; when the idea came to my mind - humba!

     the thought of that spicy, aromatic, fragrant dish had already lifted up my drooping spirits!  blah, blah, blah... and the rest is history.


     well, not exactly.  i posted a photo of the humba in facebook (where else? as usual) and to my surprise i got a handful more comments than i usually do (sometimes a status post is viewed only by flies. translation: nilalangaw!  meaning: walang pumansin ng status post, parang yung mga isda at karneng tinda sa talipapa ni aling maria, walang bumibli kaya nilalangaw, iiiiw!), and i got a couple of friends wanting to have some (one was in the USA, the legendary food blogger of manila spoon, the other, my good fil-chi friend, who just enjoys good food; i missed one friend's comment though - she often makes positive kanchaw to my status posts), and a couple of friends requesting for its recipe.  (now you know why i am posting this recipe in a vegetarian-vegan blog!)

     ok, about recipes...  it isn’t exactly an exact science - and i didn't take up culinary arts - i took up mathematics - go figure!  but here’s (almost) how i cooked my humba.

     you will need: (almost)
1 pata (this would be about 1-1/2 to 2 kilos depending... slice into smaller pieces)
3/4 - 1 cup vinegar (i used sukang iloko, since i had a lot in stock) - the sour element
3/8 - 1/2 cup soy sauce - the salty element
3/4 - 1 cup sugar (i use washed or segunda) - the sweet element
6 - 8 cloves garlic (crushed) - to spice it up
1 large onion  (sliced) - to give a piquant base (pa-piquant piquant pa eh!)
2 - 3 laurel leaves - the sharp aromatic
2 - 3 sprigs oregano (dried) - the minty aromatic
4 Tbsp banana blossoms - the earthy aromatic
8 shoots spring onions (uncut) - adds zing
2 star anise, a.k.a. sangke (whole) - the fragrant aromatic
2 liters water for boiling

     cooking directions: (almost)
1. boil the meat in water and remove the “skoma” (the brownish bubbles that move over to the sides of the wok or kaldero - if you don’t ladle it out it will stick to the sides and dry up).
2. put everything in the wok except the kitchen sink, ah, i meant, except the sugar.
3. boil until the sauce is reduced to (probably) half the original amount.
4. add the sugar, depending on the sweetness you prefer.  i made my humba a bit on the sour side, i mean, the sourness dominated the sweetness; but my daughter preferred it on the sweet side, the sweetness dominating the sourness, and so i added a couple of tablespoons sugar.  so the amount of sugar depends on the weather, ah, i meant, the whether - whether you want it on the sour side or the sweet side.  now, if you totally eliminate the sugar altogether, ahh, that’s no longer humba - it’s adobo for you!  spicy fragrant aromatic adobo!  hmm...  

but, if you remove the vinegar altogether, that’s almost pata tim, hmm...

5. cook until what’s left of the sauce suits you.

good eats !!!



Thursday, July 18, 2013

ilocos 2013 - day 1

     As I begin to write this blog, my wife (Jane) and I are here at the pre-departure area of the Laoag International Airport in Ilocos Norte, awaiting the (delayed) arrival of our Cebu Pacific airplane, a turboprop ATR-72-500, which will take us back to Manila.  The time is 9:07pm.

     It was a gruelling 2-day, 400 km. cross-country adventure which took us up north to Pagudpud to down south to Vigan.  If you haven't been to Ilocos, you couldn't imagine how gruelling this was.  Word is, that "dyaan lang" (loosely translated in the idiom “just around the corner”) in Ilocos is somewhere in the vicinity of 30-40 kms!  The same is also true in the Mt. Province - although there "dyaan lang" could be three mountains away!

     We set camp in the town of Sarat, roughly 85 kms. south of Pagudpud and 90 kms. north of Vigan, in (what we've fondly called) Fort “Valdez” Ilocandia - the residence of Tess Valdez, widow of our good Christian friend, Pastor Romy.  Being in a strange place - or should I say being in a place where I am a stranger (tourist) - it helps ease my mind that there is someone who lives there that I know.  (Uhm… I didn't really know Tess before our trip to Ilocos, but since Romy was a friend, the introductions were mere formalities.)

Three Generations : Tess, Kendong (3), and Inang (94)
     Blah, blah, blah... We took off for Pagudpud around 9am in a 1994 Toyota Corolla borrowed from Tess's brother.  Jane and I took the back seat; Tess, the front passenger's seat; and behind the wheel was Warren Chua, a friend from church who has been going to Ilocos Norte as a free missionary - a very able chauffeur.  A/C was off, the wind blew on our faces.

Jane, with Warren, behind the wheel.

First stop: Pasuquin Bakery, at Pasuquin town, home of the famous Pasuquin Biscocho.  For the uninitiated (like Jane and I) this Biscocho is nothing like any Biscocho you'd ever imagine, which usually is bread toasted crisp with butter and sugar.   The Pasuquin Biscocho is a rolled soft white bread (like a twin bun in appearance, but on both ends of the bread you can see the spiral lines that mark how the bread was rolled) which tastes much like (and a little less salty than) white bread, except for a hint of anise. 




     The Biscocho is so popular that when my hand-carried bag was inspected at the final checking counter at the airport and the security personnel noticing a plastic “sando” bag with something soft in it asked what it was and I said “tinapay”, the other security personnel across the counter, looking at me with a glint in his eye indicating he has second guessed me, said, “Biscocho”.  I said with a tone of affirmation, “Biscocho!”  We bought a pack (cost: P70) to take home to the kids, and another one to eat along the way.  In passing, if you have a sweet tooth, try the Balicutia.

     On the way to Pasuquin (from Sarat) we had to pass through Laoag.  Here we saw the Sinking Bell Tower.

The Sinking Bell Tower

Next stop: Pasuquin fresh seafood ihaw-ihaw along the highway, where we bought a "bonito" Yellow Fin Tuna (cost: P120, but we got it for P80 because Tess was a “suki” - and it’s always good to travel with an Ilocano speaking person when in Ilocos), and thumb-sized Squids on barbecue sticks (cost: P100 for 15 pcs).  "Ano'ng tawag sa maliit na pusit?"  "Eh di pssst!"  "Eh ano naman ang tawag sa baligtad na pusit?"  "Eh di op-pusit!"  We saved this for lunch later in Pagudpud - not the jokes, quasimodo! - the inihaw.  (That was the plan, but plans change along the way).



Next stop: Cape Bojeador, site of the famous Lighthouse.  


    I was a victim of the popular error of mis-pronouncing the name of the place, being here for the first time and having heard it countless times before pronounced CafĂ© or Kape Bojeador, as in Kape Barako.  But it’s Cape, as in the “Cape Crusader” Batman… and Robin the Boy Wonder. 


     It was a high and hard climb to the Lighthouse, some of the steps were too steep for aging-knee comfort (but it was more difficult going down).  The site offers a good panoramic view of the sea and the surrounding terrain.  




    If you happen to enjoy ice candy, then you might find a vendor or two selling “dragon fruit” ice candy, a treat more to the eyes than to the palate – but a treat no less.




     We had lunch at an open food hall outside the Burgos Municipal Hall, where Tess and Romy used to stop over from Apayao.  Nothing much here except this Azkal dog who kept making “kalabit” our laps asking for food.  I told my friends, “Do you know this guys name?  It’s “Kalabit”.”, because he keeps making us “kalabit”.  And to my friends’ amazement and surprise, the owner of the food joint told them that it was indeed “Kalabit” but in Ilocano, which is “Kulding”.



3rd Stop: Kapurpurawan Rock Formations. 

     This place is so out of this world !!!  It's like visiting another planet.   




Unless you happen to see a beautiful girl...   


...and make her pose for a picture.


Or see a giant with a girl on the palm of his hand...














Or just do something crazy above an enormous boulder - you'll be fine.










3rd Stop: Bangui, site of the Windmills.  

     These Windmills are huge, gargantuan, towering structures that are arrayed along the beach, 




whirring… and whirring… and whirring… and whirring…





     It’s probably the feeling you get when you would encounter an alien UFO.


4th Stop: Pagudpud.  Wherever you find yourself in Saud or Pagudpud, you are bound to be calmed, relaxed and refreshed by the breathtaking view of the sand, the sea and the sky.  There is a point where these three elements wonderfully meet, which makes it a picture perfect memento of the place. 



The Sand, The Sea and The Sky in Pagudpud.


     Our stay was (actually) short lived (we joked about this) : We travelled to Pagudpud for two hours, stayed for fifteen minutes, Warren swam for five minutes, then rushed to Solsona.


Final Stop: Solsona, home of a friend, Sister Lourdes.  Solsona is nearly 120 kms from Pagudpud.  It was past 4 pm and we didn’t want to be stuck in Solsona by nightfall.  We heard creepy stories of people decapitated in Solsona, so we were quite anxious about getting there while there still was daylight and leave in one piece, with our heads still attached to our shoulders. 

     The place was ingenuously rustic.  After crossing over a dry irrigation canal on a couple of thick wooden planks, we were met by a brood of native chickens, a family of cats, a dog, and some ducks feeding inside a pen, and Sister Lourdes flashing a broad smile.  Hugs.  Ten steps inside their backyard, we were walking beside a lush patch of corn plants on the right, banana trees on the left, a shrub of lemongrass here, a lemon “kalamansi” tree there, and surrounding their tiny abode, a verdant half-hectare plantation of mature rice (some already starting to bear fruit).  


with Sister Lourdes

     On the west the sun was setting, bringing the horizon to a fiery blaze of color behind the silhouette of trees bordering the expansive rice field.  On the east the tone of the mountains deepened in a mossy hue, and in front of me… a Cow!  A ghostly Cow with sharp horns!  Ngee, I almost bumped into him!  (It was getting dark, and this happened on our way out; the Cow was probably brought in to shed when it was getting dark, since I don’t remember seeing him on our way in.)  Enough of this rustic episode!

     We were treated to one of the chickens, oh mehn!  They slaughtered one of the native chickens to make Tinola.  We were also served Pork Adobo and Pakbet – both Ilocano specialties.  E di mag-kinamot (ay, bisaya!).  Yes, best meal we had!  “Masiram!” (ay, bicol!)  But, really the food was - "Naimas!!!"  I asked what the name of the chicken was, but Sister Lourdes said they didn’t call their chicken by name – it would’ve been hard to eat a chicken with a name.  We ate Roger.  We call dogs by name, yes, Browny, the brown dog, Blacky, the black dog, Whitey, the white dog, and Tagpi, the tagpi-tagpi dog – how hard is that ?!  And cats??? 

Home.  Back in Fort “Valdez” Ilocandia.  

Day 2 - Vigan