Just as I thought I was street smart as far as navigating around Divisoria was concerned, I've been had. A few weeks ago, I was shortchanged when I bought some round onions on Sta. Elena St. The price was cheaper than the supermarket and the round onions were of good quality -- shiny skin, no rotten parts, uniform medium sizes. But when I got home and started to put the onions on our small native basket, I found them to be of larger sizes and three pieces were even peeled. I stared at my purchase in disbelief. How could I buy large onions and choose peeled ones? Then I realized I've been had.
The modus operandi is for the seller to quickly switch the plastic bag of items you bought with another pre-packed bag while your eyes shifted from the weighing scale to your purse. You only discover this when you reach home and remove the contents from the bag.
Lesson learned -- In Divisoria, don't buy from the streets or roadside unless the seller is your suki. If you must, stand close to the weighing scale, keep your eyes on the scale, and grab the items first before handing the payment to the seller. That won't give the seller a chance to switch bags.
A food and travel blog that deals with eating places, recipes, food shops, and travel tips
Thursday, November 20, 2008
Monday, November 17, 2008
Marketman's Lechon Eyeball in Cebu
Photo credit: Marketman's Lechon (www.marketmanila.com)
I've been so remiss in updating this blog as my time was diverted to Devcompage. I've been to Penang, Singapore and Ho Chi Minh City in the past few weeks and I will share with you my food trips to these places in another post. But today, let me tell you about marketmanila's Lechon Eyeball in Cebu City that I had the great pleasure of participating in.
About 50 or so guests attended the marketmanila eyeball, There were three lechons made byMarketman's crew, one using the traditional Cebu style and two using his Accuchon style. Visit his blog for details of the lechon and his journey to a perfect Accuchon. The lechons were excellent and full of flavor that a crushed garlic-chili-vinegar dip was the perfect accompaniment to it. There was also a lot of lechon skin for everyone.
Besides the lechons, Marketman also laid out a tempting spread of several types of native salads -- guso, lato, eggplant, langka, green mango with sauteed bagoong -- crabs, prawns, lechon paksiw, kinilaw nga tangigue, grilled sweet corn, puso (hanging rice), budbud kabug (a suman made of millet, coconut milk and sugar), Mrs. U's silvanas and tocino del cielo, torta, small blueberry cheese cakes, biko, native ice cream and fresh fruits -- mangosteen, mango, pineapple.
Besides the scrumptious food, new friendships were made and a sense of community among kindred Marketman's fans pervaded the eyeball atmosphere. There were VIP guests too who were so unbelievably down-to-earth: Margarita Fores of Cibo fame, Frank Borromeo, the artisan chocolatier from Cebu, Mrs. U, the silvanas queen of Cebu, Joey of 80 Breakfasts, among others. It was a splendid Saturday indeed.
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