Showing posts with label Kusina Salud. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kusina Salud. Show all posts

Friday, March 21, 2008

Kusina Salud at Bisita Iglesia

What a jam-packed holy week we had! Just to give you some snippets of what we were up to during the four-day weekend.

Maundy Thursday
A very looong drive to Kusina Salud for a buffet lunch of Pako Salad, Lumpiang Ubod, Sinigang, Kulawo salad (Both in banana hearts and eggplants), Tapang Kalabao (yes, carabao), seafood Kare-Kare and halo halo for dessert. Yum, well worth the drive.








After a very sumptuous lunch, we make our way back to Manila for Bisita Iglesia. Bisita Iglesia (Literally means visiting churches), in Filipino tradition is visiting a total of 14 churches. A prayer is said for each church, representing each station of the cross. We managed to visit 7 churches. We went to Manila Cathedral where none other than Cardinal Rosales officiating the mass.



After that we went to San Agustin, just walking distance from manila Cathedral. It’s the most interesting walk ever. The small eskinita is filled with every imaginable Filipino street food and kakanin (local desserts)! Boiled peanuts, grilled and boiled corn, grilled bananas (that’s a new one, even for me), grilled and fried dried squid, fish balls, kikiam, squid balls, Indian mango with bagoong, sa malamig (a cold multi colored beverage with milk, gelatin and tapioca balls), coconut juice. I was very tempted to buy everything! Damn the germs! :-) But I was with my mom and Tita Cora and we were on a tight schedule. So many junk food, so little time......



Other churches that we visited were, Paco Park, Binondo Church, San Marcelino Church, Malate Church and the Church near mall of Asia.

For dinner, we stopped by Aristocrat for their famous Chicken barbecue with Java Rice. The recipe is unchanged all these years. In fact, my Tita Cora held her wedding reception there many decades ago!

We also dropped by my mom’s childhood home in Singalong (it’s now a bank) . She and Tita Cora told me so many stories about their childhood and my grandparents. It’s also a trip down memory lane for them. I miss my grandparents too. Easter has always been such a huge celebration with my grandmother.

By the time we got home, it was past midnight!

Tuesday, October 2, 2007

A Trip to San Pablo - Kusina Salud

When my cousin Butchie read about Kusina Salud in my previous blog, he was very intrigued by the salads served there.

With my mom in tow, we took a two hour drive to San Pablo, Laguna. But first, we had to buy Tita Socky's Coffee Alamid at the coffee bar at the Insular Life Building in Filinvest, Alabang.



"Coffee Alamid is Philippine Civet Coffee from wild civet droppings on the different forest floors of Philippine mountains. The Paradoxorus Philippinensis is a civet which belongs to the mongoose family - a nocturnal animal which uses its nose to choose the ripest and sweetest coffee cherries and relentlessly eats them during coffee season. Gathered very early in the morning usually before the sun rises, the forest dwellers climb the mountain and pick the civet droppings on the forest floors. On a good day, a gatherer can collect one kilo of civet droppings .

Coffee Alamid is a blend of the Philippine's finest Arabica, Liberica and Exelsa beans. When roasted, it exudes an almost musical, fruity aroma. It has a strong, sweet , dark chocolatey taste."

From arrengga.com

All three of us never had this coffee and we were curious of how it tastes like. We bought two cups of freshly brewed alamid coffee and we unanimouly loved it! Butchie loved it so much he bought his own bottle of Alamid coffe beans despite not having a coffee machine at home and vowed to buy one as soon as he got home.



The drive was very pleasant and filled with happy conversations about work, family and of course food and recipes. All the talk about food made us very hungry indeed.

When we arrived to Kusina Salud, we immediately took a group picture for posterity.



After pouring though the menu, we ordered Kusina Salud's famous salads. The Pako Salad (fern salad) and the Kulawo Salad with Calamares.



The Pako Salad (above) is made with baby ferns, crumbled salted egg, cheddar and local white cheeses, onions in a tangy vinegar and hollandaise dressing. The baby ferns we learned, are sourced from the local market. Butchie loved this salad so much, he ordered another one.



The Kulawo Salad, pictured above, is made from banana hearts with coconut milk cooked in a palayok or native clay pot over hot coals (the kulawo itself is the grayish mound in the middle of the plate) that's why it has a distinct, coconutey and smokey flavor. A must-try.



For main courses we had Kare-Kareng Dagat and Pinakbet with Lechon Kawali. The Kare-Kareng Dagat (pictured above) is a combination of prawns, mussels, fish and squid stewed in peanut sauce and served with bagoong (shrimp paste) on the side. This particular dish's sauce was surprisingly light and the shrimps are served tempura-style on top of the Kare-kare. Another winner.



The pinakbet was made using bagoong isda (fermented fish) instead of the typical bagoong. It also has ginger slices to mellow out the bagoong isda. The lechon kawali that accompanied it was also great, crispy on the outside but the meat is very tender.



For dessert, we had home-made Avocado Ice Cream, which is not on the menu. Be sure to inquire about this dessert when you dine at Kusina Salud because it very good. The ice cream itself is not too sweet yet creamy enough to satisfy any sweet tooth. The best part is that you can really tell it was made with real avocados.



My mom and I tried the Ube Guinataan, a coconut cream based dessert that had jackfruit, sweet potato, plantain bananas in ube (purple yam) sauce. A unique twist to your typical guinataan dessert. Yummy.



Butchie was also craving for Turon, it's fried crepes with banana, sugar and langka (jackfruit) inside. The turon was served with vanilla ice cream and cocojam sauce with a sprinkling of sesame seeds.

My mom is very hard to please when it comes to dining out since she is a wonderful cook herself. But this time at Kusina Salud, she gave two thumbs up! A rare compliment to any restaurant.

After our very satisfying meal, we took more pictures.










During our drive back, we saw some lanzones stalls and bought a few kilos and managed to eat one kilo while talking about Butchie's famous home-made espasol. My mom and I were intrigued on how this particular kakanin was made. Butchie made an overseas call to his parents to get all the ingredient list to make his family's well guarded secret recipe (which I am not sharing here, as requested). Before going home, we dropped by the supermarket to buy all the necessry ingredients.

For dinner, Butchie had asked the maid to steam some baby blue crabs and oysters, as well as shrimps cooked in 7up soda, grilled and fried tilapia. Everything was cooked perfectly and laid out so nicely on the serving platters. The best parts of the meal were the lively conversations that we had while eating our meal and that hubby was able to join us this time.











I don't thing it should be legal to ingest this much food in one day :-)

Thursday, August 30, 2007

Family Lunch at Kusina Salud

Sorry took so long to post this. Hubby and I have been sick and had to take it easy for a few days. All is well now :-)

Last Sunday the family (all 14 of us), drove to Kusina Salud for the family's weekend glutton festival. The drive took a total of 1 1/2 hours and 3 cars.

The place was an instant hit with the first timers in the group. It's a traditional Filipino vacation home of old. Antique narra furniture interspersed with batibot chairs, local antique dolls, figurines, capiz windows, orchids and a wide variety of local knick knacks adorn the charming home. Fountains located in several areas provide soothing sounds while you dine. It's type of home that your lola would probably have if she lived in a province in the 1930's.

For this Sunday, Kusina Salud only offered buffet lunch consisting of Filipino Salad (Cucumbers, Okra, Onions, Kangkong in a choice of bagoong alamang or bagoong balayan sauce), Vegetarian Laing, Monggo with Bulalo, Fried Tuyo, Chicken Inasal and Sisig. For dessert, Saba con yelo and sponge cake with matamis na bao. My favorite was the sisig.













Despite only offering buffet that lunch, the restaurant did make us Kulawo (banana heart) Salad with Calamari in Hollandaise Sauce and Pako Salad (fern salad) upon request. Both were absolute winners. The kulawo particularly is the specialty of the house. I've only had this salad there and nowhere else. If you're in the area, a must try.





We also had a fantastic time taking pictures.













On our way home, we all bought stainless steel pitchers and grill from several stores that line the highway. They're much cheaper than what you would buy in a department store and since it's on the way, we all indulged in a little bit of shopping.

My brother Jacob and I even bought some rambutan, freshly picked from the plantation nearby and some lanzones also from the fruit stands found along the highway. Yum!