This dish is the sibling of my entry to Presto Pasta Night. Chicken Parmegiane is one of the dishes that Giada de Laurentiis made together with Lemon Spaghetti. When I saw her layer my favorite food components into her pan, I know this is one dish I certainly can't resist. I love the marriage of herbs and cheese in a poultry. I envisioned a lip-smacking, finger-snapping meal. But since my pantry is limited with some of the ingredients she used, I modified the recipe and made it more to our taste liking. I was just a bit disappointed with the brand of the quickmelt cheese I used in my first try. It's simply not true to its name. It did not melt easily and the fusion of tomato sauce and cheese that I expected did not happen. (I'll just let the photo below talk more about it). Fortunately, it did not completely spoil the dish's overall profile. It still has that rich, cheesy and herby notes. Hence, I know better when I made it the second time around. Complement this dish with your favorite pasta and you'll never go wrong.
250 g italian spaghetti sauce, 1/2 kg chicken breast fillet, 1 cup quick melt cheese, 1/2 cup parmesan cheese, 5 tbsps extra virgin olive oil, 1 tsp italian seasoning, 1 tbsp chopped fresh basil leaves, 1 tbsp butter, salt and pepper to taste
How to Prepare:
1. Mix together italian seasoning or herb mix, salt, pepper and 2 tbsps of olive oil in a small bowl.
2. Brush the mixture to the chicken fillet (both sides) and pan-fry it in the remaining amount of olive oil until the skin turns brown.
3. Transfer the cooked chicken in a baking dish. Pour over the italian spaghetti sauce. Add the quickmelt cheese and parmesan cheese on top.
4. Spread out butter in the baking dish and bake it in the oven until the cheese melts.
5. Add chopped fresh basil leaves before serving.
What particularly enticed me to try this recipe is it's simplicity. The preparation of the dish is pretty straightforward. Boil, chop, stir and blend! Before you know it, you're already savouring a mouthful of refreshing pasta with a zest!
What you need:
500 g pack spaghetti noodles, 1/2 cup lemon juice, 2/3 cups parmesan cheese, 2/3 cups olive oil, fresh basil leaves (chopped)
How to Prepare:
1. Cook spaghetti noodles according to package directions. Reserve 1 cup of pasta water. Set aside.
2. Mix the rest of the ingredients in a bowl. Add pasta water and blend well.
3. Stir in cooked spaghetti noodles. Garnish with chopped basil leaves and some lemon zest. Enjoy with a gourmet bread on the side or any spicy dish to complement it with. Bon Apetito!
**You can also find this entry at Ruth Daniels' mouthwatering food blog - Once Upon A feast.
If I will be asked to describe the orientation of my taste buds, I know that it's more of savoury rather than sweet. But I'll definetely wouldn't say a sweet bite wouldn't entice me to some extent. Perhaps a little nibble would be enough to please my appetite. But with savoury goods, I tend to munch for more. I have a slightly higher threshold for a saltier tang. With my kids, I know it's the opposite. They would prefer sugary and chocolatey foodstuffs. Their weekend cravings put me into a more challenging task. I love to prepare sweet items but only those that require a simple mix, toss, layer, chill etc. I usually avoid baking. Apart from having an impression that it's too laborious to do, I know that baking is a culinary gem worthy to explore; but there are far more challenges in-store as you go along. However, for the love of those sweet requests from the little ones why shouldn't I dare? As follows, my weekend was spent romancing cupcake recipes in the kitchen. Because my library does not possess any cook book on baking, I went to the world wide web for some help. My online-research brought me to some interesting recipes. I just followed my sensory impulse in selecting the ones that are worth trying. With some modifications here and there; my initial attempts finally came into moulds, ready to be chomped by little mouths impatiently waiting to be pleased.
Chocolate Cupcake
What you need:
Cupcake:
1 1/2 cups all purpose flour
2/3 cup cocoa powder
1/2 tsp baking soda
1 1/2 cup sugar
1/2 cup butter, softened
3 medium sized eggs
1 tsp vanilla
1 cup fresh milk
Chocolate Fudge Frosting:
2 chocolate blocks (2 oz.)
1/8 cup butter
1/2 cup fresh milk
1 cup sugar
How to make:
1. Pre-heat the oven to 175 C.
2. Mix flour, cocoa powder and baking soda in a bowl. Beat sugar, butter, eggs and vanilla in a mixer bowl.
3. Slowly add in flour mixture alternately with milk.
4. Put 2 teaspoonfuls of batter into a paper-lined muffin moulds.
5. Bake for 20 - 25 minutes until a toothpick inserted in centers comes out clean.
6. Transfer to a wire rack and allow to cool before frosting.
7. Make the choco-fudge frosting. Mix all ingredients in a saucepan. Heat slowly until it boils briskly with constant stirring. Continue boiling until thick enough to spread onto the cupcakes. Remove from heat and add 4 tbsps butter and 1 tsp vanilla. Stir and spread immediately.
What you need:
1/2 cup margarine
1 1/2 cups sugar
3 medium sized eggs
1 tsp vanilla
1 cup ripe bananas, mashed
1/4 cup fresh milk
2 cups all purpose flour
1/2 tsp baking soda
1/2 tsp salt
How to Make:
1. Mix flour, baking soda and salt in a small bowl.
2. Cream margarine and sugar in a mixer bowl. Add eggs, vanilla, banana and milk.
3. Add the flour mixture and blend until a smooth consistency is achieved.
4. Fill paper-lined muffin moulds with 2 teaspoonfuls of batter. Bake at 350 F for 15 - 20 minutes or until a toothpick comes out clean when inserted into the center.
5. Frost with butter-milk frosting (1/2 cup butter, 2 1/2 cups powdered sugar and 1/4 cup fresh milk heated in a saucepan until of spreading consistency).

Ingredients:
4 pcs banana, quartered
1/2 cup brown sugar for coating
1/2 cup jackfruit, shredded
8 pcs spring roll wrapper, small size
vegetable oil for frying
1/2 cup grated cheddar cheese or chopped cream cheese
coriander leaves, chopped
sweet chili sauce
Procedure:
1. Coat banana slices (2 pcs/roll) with brown sugar. Put into spring roll wrapper together with some shredded jackfruit (be generous, the more the tastier) . Fold the ends of the spring roll wrapper and close it with small amount of water.
2. Coat each prepared banana spring roll with brown sugar and deep-fry in vegetable oil until it turns brown.
3. Transfer 2 pcs of fried banana spring roll onto a serving plate and top with grated cheese. Pour over 2 teaspoons of sweet chili sauce and add the chopped coriander leaves (you may adjust the amount of these components according to your liking).
** The cream cheese worked better with the banana spring roll than the cheddar cheese. The saltiness of the cheddar cheese somehow prevented a harmonious fusion, but acceptable just the same. Only, a more balanced mélange of flavors is achieved with the former.

Fish Fillet with Tausi (salted black beans)
Ingredients:
1/2 kg fish fillet (tanguige)
1 small can tausi (salted black beans)
1/4 cup oyster sauce
1/4 cup sugar
1 cup water
3 eggs, beaten
2 cups cornstarch
4 cloves garlic, chopped
1 small onion, chopped
5 stalks of spring onion, cut 1 inch in size
kinchay, chopped (as garnish)
pepper to taste
canola oil, for sauteing and frying
Procedure:
1. Coat fish fillet with cornstarch, dip in egg wash then coat with another layer of cornstach. Deep fry until golden brown. Set aside. (Do this in batches to prevent drying of the batter mixture when coated in the fish fillet)
1. Coat fish fillet with cornstarch, dip in egg wash then coat with another layer of cornstach. Deep fry until golden brown. Set aside. (Do this in batches to prevent drying of the batter mixture when coated in the fish fillet)
2. Saute onion and garlic in heated oil. Add black beans, onion leeks, oyster sauce, sugar and water. Allow to boil and simmer for 2 minutes.
3. Add fried fish fillet and mix well with the sauce. Top with chopped kinchay. Serve hot.
Shrimps in Oyster Sauce
Ingredients:
1 1/2 kg black tiger prawns
1/4 cup sugar
1/3 cup oyster sauce
1 1/2 cups water
3 tbsps butter
4 cloves garlic, minced
1 small onion, chopped
pepper to taste
3 tbsps canola oil
Procedure:
1. Saute garlic and onion in canola oil until fragrant.
2. Add the shrimps and saute until all slightly turns pink.
3. Add butter, oyster sauce, sugar, water and pepper. Simmer until the shrimps are cooked just right.
Cinnamon Pudding
Ingredients:
2 1/2 cups pandesal (shredded)
1 small can condensed milk
1 small can evaporated milk
1/3 cup sugar
1/2 cup butter
2 tsps cinnamon powder
4 eggs
Procedure:
1. Pre-heat the oven at 345 F. Cream together softened butter and sugar in a bowl. Transfer to a baking dish and set aside.
2. Mix condensed milk, evaporated milk, eggs, pandesal and cinnamon powder in a separate bowl. Soak for at least 30 minutes.
3. Pour the bread mixture into the baking dish with butter and sugar and bake for 30 mins. Serve on a plate. Sprinkle with some cinnamon powder on top. Yum!


For now, a fine coffee is all I need to complement a good read. So, Cafe Vienna and Ube Cake onto my coffee table please. Eventually, I felt happy and filled. I had the comforting atmosphere I was looking for. A coffee that kicked me for its intense burnt note and pronounced caffeine content yet; warmed me just the same. A sweet goodie that may not be superlative in its sensory profile but good enough to pair a soothing cup of coffee. Consequently, Mocha Blends have become what I, a customer, wanted them to be. From now, it'll be my comforting coffee place.
Mocha Blends
Espresso Coffee Australia
2nd flr. Humana Bldg., Sta. Rosa-Tagaytay Road
Sta. Rosa City, Laguna
Sauté 1/4 kg of spinach in 2 tbsps olive oil, 4 cloves of minced garlic and 1 small onion, chopped. Season with salt and pepper to taste.
Fried Tanguige with Lemon Butter Sauce:
Season the tanguige with salt and pepper. Pan-fry in olive oil.
Make the sauce. Mix 1/2 cup water, 1/3 cup sugar and lemon juice (from 1 fruit) in a bowl, set aside. Sauté 4 cloves of minced garlic in 2 tbsps olive oil. Add 3 tbsps butter and juice mixture. Simmer for a few minutes until the sauce thickens.
Mashed Potato:
Cook 2 large potatoes in boiling water. Puree it in a bowl. Add butter, salt and pepper to taste. Blend well. Adding fresh milk is also an option for a creamier taste.
Binukadkad na Tilapia is your usual fried tilapia that is cooked in an unusual form. There's nothing real innovative here in as far as taste is concerned. It's just plain acceptable. The most raved about in Kanin Club's menu is the "Crispy Dinuguan". I have big reservations in ordering this dish. I can’t help but imagine how noxiously it'll land into my blood streams. But because I’m over-ruled by curiosity, I gave in. It's simply lechon kawali mixed with dinuguan sauce. For a Dinuguan to be served dry, the concept is something different. But the taste is similar to any typical dinuguan recipe. The good differentiating factor is the texture. The crispness of the pork skin from the lechon kawali added an enjoyable twist. The loaded fried rice is your typical fried rice. There’s nothing so special about it. If you feel like complementing the pinoy dishes with more varied rice, it's an available option. Lumpiang Sariwa is another distinctive Filipino dish that we found pleasing to our palate. The sautéd vegetables enclosed in the lumpia wrapper are cooked just right, matched with the sweet sauce finished with peanut bits on top.
Apart from the featured dishes above, other foods we found worth ordering are Sinigang sa Miso na Salmon, Seafood Kare-Kare, Bistek, Daing na Bangus and the much talked about Turon KC a la mode. It's a fried, sweet banana roll made together with ube halaya, mongo beans and macapuno glazed with sugar syrup and sesame seeds.
So, was it worthy giving Kanin Club another try? Generally, yes. There are dishes that will make your digestive elements happy and filled. On a cost per dish, there are foods that are fairly priced considering the serving size and taste. But for the same reasons, there are also those that may come out a little over priced. The rule of thumb then is to simply make the right choice.
90 g Korean raddish, cut into strips
24 g onion leeks, cut into strips
200 g rock salt
1.1 kg water
20 g malagkit powder (rice flour), cooked in 300 ml water
25 g garlic, finely chopped
64 ml fermented Korean fish sauce
70 g red pepper powder
6 g ginger, finely chopped
sugar to taste
Procedure:
1. Cut chinese cabbage into halves, do not wash.
2. Put rock salt in between the leaves. Soak in water for 3 hours (more salt means faster soaking time). Wash in running water after soaking.
3. Cook malagkit powder (rice flour) with continuous stirring. It's done when it starts to boil. Allow to cool.
4. Put malagkit paste in a mixing bowl. Add red pepper powder, fish sauce, raddish, onion leeks, ginger, garlic and sugar. Mix well (this is your Kimchi paste).
5. Spread Kimchi paste into individual leaves (make sure all leaves are coated). Fold and seal using the outermost leaf to avoid any spillage.
6. Put the leaves in tightly sealed containers and store in the refrigerator overnight. Continue storage in an ambient condition for 3 more days. On the 4th day it's ready to be consumed.
It’s been quite a while since I last dropped by at Shell to grab its well-liked chocolate cake. Much to my delight in my next visit, there are new sweet stuffs to try. New names that put my sweet appetite into craving are Ceilin’s and Redado’s. After I mulled over this and that, my husband and I decided to bring home Cielin's Brazo de Mercedes and Redado's Choco Fudge Brownies. I was enrobed with excitement until these goodies get through to my taste buds. As I chomped through each of them; momentarily, my excitement collapsed. Honestly, neither tasted the way I expected it to be. The Brazo de Mercedes is beyond a creamy, eggy, tasty treat. The custard filling felt paste-like (soft gelatine) in consistency.
Kalye Juan
North Parking 139 - 140 SM Mall of Asia
Tel. #: 5560612
The Oceanarium was described as "the first and largest aquarium facility in the Philippines. It promises an experience of a wide variety of species indigenous to the Philippines and South East Asia. Getting inside the park, a dome shaped entrance hall is what will welcome the visitors. It's ceiling is a large showcase of photos of marine animals alongside its sponsors. A very friendly queue is what you will experience in a weekday visit (see photo below). If you want to avoid all those tiring hurdles and difficulties in buying the ticket, I highly recommend a morning weekday visit. We went there at 11:00 am, just an hour after it was opened and we managed to enter the park in a breeze.
The tour starts with the 1st zone, AGOS (FLOW). This is where you're supposed to learn about the natural flow of water from land to sea. This explains the sounds of flowing water as you roam around the area. The highlight of Agos is the "touch pool". Guests will have a chance for a hands-on experience with some of the Park's inhabitants such as starfish and sea cucumber.
The 2nd zone is BAHURA (REEF). This is the most vibrant area for me and perhaps where the most familiar species are. Think of Nemo and Dori, you'll find them here. Thanks to the movie "Finding Nemo", it famed that vivacious, sparkling clownfish kids are now fond of.
Third zone is LAOT (FISHING GROUND). It features marine species living in the deep waters of the sea. Big aquariums are located here but ironically houses only quite a few. The most interesting subject of this zone is the giant grouper (Lapu-Lapu) which can weigh as much as 660 pounds. That bony fish is real big! This is pretty much the darkest area as well and the "no flash photography" is strictly being implemented. The designs of the aquariums are by the way notable.
The 4th zone is perhaps the main attraction of the Oceanarium, BUHAY NA KARAGATAN ( THE LIVING OCEAN). This is what they said is the real deal of the Park, the 25 meter-long tunnel encasing various marine animals. Manila Ocean Park claims big about this glass tunnel beating that of Singapore and Hongkong. But did it? Apart from the sharks, sting rays and other lots of marine inhabitants graciously swimming above my head, I can hardly see the vastness they said they're showcasing. Yes, it is quite big but content wise, I'm still craving for more.
The 5th zone is ANG KALALIMAN (THE DEEP). This zone features the different kinds of schooling fish such as the Barracuda. Again, very few schools can be found.
The 6th and 7th zones are PAGI (STINGRAY) and PATING (SHARK) respectively. I would say these particular sorts dominated the whole Oceanarium. There's an over hang tank where top and bottom views of sting rays can be enjoyed. Likewise, an open tank for closer shark viewing is made available at the second floor of the acitivity area. Other activities to experience in the second floor are Fish Spa (Php100/30 mins) and Glass Bottom Boat Ride (Php150). I tried the fish spa merely for the experience (and I would say that's really just it, no more no less). This is how the Fish Spa experience is going to be: you pay for your entrance ticket, remove your shoes, dip your feet into the water and be tickled by the small fishes as they ripped off your dead skin cells, wait for 30 mins to last, ask for some white towels to dry your feet and your done. It's fun but I have some reservations in trying it out again here. First, there's no "pre-washing" of feet. You head straight to the fish pond/pool and dip. I wonder how many different kinds of feet landed in there?! Much more how they maintain the cleanliness of the water? Second, there's no mention of what good or what makes fish spa a different experience even just in posts or prints. How will others be encouraged? Unless they got intrigued, it's likely, people will just pass by this one. Third, they can hardly monitor when the session is finished. It's really just up to you when you want it done. But honestly, who would want to stay longer? I just won't dare.
On the whole, the Oceanarium promised an imaginable adventure to its guests. Partly this promise came to life. But I want it to sparkle more with other new sea creatures. I know our thousands of islands have more than just that. The Oceanarium is the perfect place to show the bounty and beauty of our natural resources. On the contrary, if the Park mirrors the real condition of our marine habitat, that would be a real disturbing thought for now. Thus, it's just apt and timely to flash this environmental concern. But it should not just sit on the floor of the Oceanarium, it should be realized.
Manila Ocean Park
Behind Quirino Grandstand
Luneta Park, Manila, Philippines
Tel. #: 5677777
Fax #: 5672309
Open Mondays - Sundays 10:00 am to 9:00 pm
Entrance Fee: Php 400 - adults, Php 350 - kids