Surprisingly, a coffee shop and deli serves the Filipino's ultimate summer treat - halo-halo. A melange of corn, coconut strips, sago and cornflakes among others, it is topped with a luscious ube ice cream that makes it a doubly heat buster. But what sets this apart among almost all halo-halo I tasted so far in Iloilo is the quality of the ice. While most halo-halos have this coarsely shaved ice, this one got's a smooth "texture" that melts in your mouth yet still has a bite. So, wave goodbye to the summer blues with Bluejay's halo-halo, and juts like their coffees and specialty drinks - it's good to the last "drop"!
It's not Catbalogan nor Katagalugan, it's CA-TA-LU-GAN, Catalugan. I also had the same problem when I was a kid when reading and remembering the name of this bread. But the many years of enjoying this specialty from Tibiao Bakery, I think I have it in me. So what is catalugan? It's basically a filled bread and like what you see, it has more filling that the "bread" itself. Tibiao Bakery makes the more "high end" catalugan as they are big, individually wrapped and deliciously addicting. Smaller bakeshops also make catalugan but its just the regular "one of those" breads. But this one from Tibiao is worth every "bit and morsel". For around 12 each (few years back it was only PhP 10), this bite size bread is heavy as the filling is a compact and flavouful blend of "secrets" for this one had no ingredients listed on its packaging. So I can only assume what they are everytime I am ...
