Skip to main content

A Christmas luncheon at Camp Alfredo in Guimaras


The zip line and the adventure facilities are not the only attractions at Camp Alfredo in Guimaras. As one communes with nature - the lush greens, the fresh air, the sound of the stream, the natural flora and fauna, during a visit, gastronomy also becomes an attraction itself.
And I have proven it once more, a few days before 2011 came to an end during Camp Alfredo's first ever Christmas Lunch Party. With guests coming mostly from Manila and the US, it was also a reunion of sorts for the families who were there. As always food becomes an integral part of any family gathering and this was among them.
With the luncheon catered by Barrio Inasal, which also serves the fares at the Camp during regular days, it was a galore of grilled specialties heralded by the specialty of the house - chicken inasal. Among the best chicken inasals, Barrio Inasal prides itself of having the authentic kind and taste plus it is grilled upon order so it may take a while. Though these ones were prepared ahead but they still tasted as if they were right of the grill.
Just by looking at this photo (with one hand holding the stick and the other the camera), the taste memories of this chicken inasal comes back vividly to the senses. The crips and golden brown chicken meat, the aroma of the spices and ofcourse that first bite into the juicy meat oozing with flavour that I didn't care whether the sides of my mouth became orange too - I just savoured every bite then.
Now there's isol or iwi - the chicken's butt. A delicacy on its own and it almost always comes as barbecued. For an occasional isol eater like me, I couldn't help but get a stick and devoured it even with no sawsawan - not my usual thing. And it's as juicy and tender as my memory recalls.
And then there's the grilled managat and it's whole! usually it's the lower portion that comes in grilled in most restaurants I've been to, for the head becomes the soup part. This is among the best grilled managat I've tasted - perfect grilled, juicy, well seasoned - believe no need for sawsawan, for it seems the sawsawan is already part of the seasoning basted into the fish while being grilled.
The grilled squid was also good though nothing over spectacular, just the right toughness to go with the flavour. I even went back for another whole squid a few minutes after finishing my first. There was also a plate of shrimps, cooked like in anybody's home - just with salt and placed in frying pan.
Odd man out was the side dish - kimchi. Not part of the Barrio Inasal menu though, just an on the spot addition as there were Koreans in the group then. But I also enjoyed this myself going back for more to go with the grilled specialties on my plate. Java rice was our staple that time and there also was a lechon which was very good. It a local lechonero in Guimaras who made it - the skin was thin and crisp and the insides were very flavourful especially the ribs part. I still don't remember why I forgot to take photos ...
Maybe, I was just saving battery to use when I start my photowalk around the lush greens and the new man made structures that I wasn't able to see the last time I visited there (which was just 15 days before that). And yes, this "bridge over troubled waters" instantly became my favorite subject as I started my journey around the camp ...
And it will have a separate blog post very soon ...

Popular posts from this blog

An Ilonggo favorite - Valenciana

Found in almost all occasions like fiesta, birthdays, reunions and others, Ilonggos really love valenciana because most if not all have grown accustomed of having it in special gatherings at home.  A complete " go, grow and glow " dish because it has the carbohydrates, protein and vitamins and minerals in just one spoonful, Valenciana is really an " occasional dish ".  Here's the recipe for Valenciana

Ultimate Ilonggo Favorite: KBL Kadyos, Baboy, Langka

K.B.L. or Kadyos, Baboy, Langka is the ultimate favorite dish of most Ilonggos. It is also one of the most missed native dishes as kadyos and the souring ingredient, batwan , are hard to find when outside of the Ilonggo region.  Basically, it is boiled/stewed pork dish owing its "deliciousness" to the combination of the soft and tender pork, the tamed sourness of  batwan  and the  malinamnam na sabaw .  One of the "secrets" of the malinamnamn na sabaw , is the fact that the pork, whether just the plain meat or pata (hocks) are first grilled or broiled. This gives the broth a rather smoky taste that makes it more appetizing.. Learn how to make the Ilonggo dish KBL (Kadyos, Baboy, at Langka) with the recipe below. Ingredients 1 kilo Pata (pork hocks) or pork cubes, GRILLED and sliced into bite size pieces  1 unripe Jack fruit, cubed 2 cups pigeon pea (kadyos) 6-8 pieces batwan fruit  (or tamarind powder) 1 piece por...

A native delicacy called Inday-inday

Now you may ask, what is Inday-Inday ? It's another repetitive-feminine named native delicacy that is made from rice like its more popular sister - baye-baye . While the latter is has its own original flavor and make, inday-inday is actually a combination of two well loved native delicacies - muasi ( palitaw ) and bukayo . But the muasi portion is not the the usual palitaw  recipe for the it's more firm and gummy (I don't know the English term for kid-ol ). Actually its more like a hardened kutsinta and this makes it more to my liking since I'm not really fond of muasi in the first place.  And its not quite easy to find inday-inday in the market today, though I've seen and tried it in Sabor Ilonggo stalls but their's is more like suman latik for the based is ibos -like. Ibos is malagkit rice boiled in gata which is called suman in Tagalog. Despite the uncertainty for its nomenclature (I've read that inday-inday is just plain pal...

Muasi

A confession to start this blogpost - I consider MUASI as one of my hated native delicacies given its bland taste even with the sugar dip. But that was back during my childhood days. Maybe be because I may have used less sugar or might have completely forgotten to "dip" it at all. Yet nowadays, I have learned to appreciate it especially when its freshly cooked with the muscovado teeming the aroma of roasted sesame seeds. So let's make some MUASI

An Ilonggo favorite - Suman Latik

Suman Latik is one of my favorite native delicacies - plain suman/ibos topped with sweetened coconut strips or bukayo . Most of the time those sold in the markets have this two (suman and bukayo) already in one wrap and all you have to to is devour it. But most of the time, the bukayo portion is bitin that I wish there's more. So why not make our own suman latik so you can have all the suman we want with all the bukayo toppings we desire! Here's a simple recipe for Suman Latik