In Manila, one of the popular places to visit is the Presidential Museum and Library in the Malacañan Palace, which affords one a glimpse of Philippine political history. To enter though, one must fill out a reservation form and wait for seven working days before being able to visit the museum. Foreign visitors must include a photocopy of his or her passport’s main page.
Casa Roces, which sits just across
the historic seat of authority and government of the country, offers a Malacañan
tour package, which includes a tour of the museum, a souvenir to commemorate
the tour and an introduction to Filipino cuisine through breakfast and merienda sets special only for the
package. Additionally, the ancestral house transformed into a finest-dining
restaurant offers convenience. One has to book for a tour, and Casa Roces will
arrange for the permit. So far, it is only Casa Roces that is granted this special
privilege, beating other hotels and restaurants in Manila.
Aside from the tour, one can look
out for Casa Roces’s offerings, a mixture of Spanish, American and Filipino
dishes which is said to “recall the milieu and flavors of the colonial and Commonwealth
era.”
Three sets of breakfast — if the tour is in the
morning — or merienda — if in the
afternoon — are available to choose from.
For breakfast, there is a set called Ode to
Quezon, a tribute to the first Filipino president who lived in Malacañan
Palace. Highlighting a Western-style breakfast, the set has bacon crisps,
sautéed sausages, Spanish omelet, pancakes or toast, garden salad, and a medley
of fresh fruits.
Those
who prefer Filipino breakfast can choose P-Noy’s Power Brunch, named after the current
president, who is said to be a regular patron of the restaurant. It includes beef
tapa, crispy danggit, Filipino omelet, garlic rice or pandesal, grilled eggplant salad and sliced local fruits..
Those with a hefty appetite can pick
the Maharlika Platter, a mixture of Filipino and Western flavors and
ingredients, which include Tuguegarao longganisa,
corned beef hash, vegetable omelet, plain rice or toast, breakfast salad and
assorted fruits.
Afternoon visitors will get the merienda sets: the Escolta Siesta, Ilustrado
Comfort and Ilocandia Flair.
Escolta Siesta is named after the historic
commercial district beside the Pasig River. The set includes kaldereta turnover, pancit palabok, tuna sandwich, potato crisps and revel bar. On the
other hand Ilustrado Comfort is said to recall the Western fare of Filipino
intellectuals in Spain during the colonial period. One gets a tuna turnover,
spaghetti Bolognese, chicken salad sandwich, sour cream and onion potato chips
and chocolate brownies.
As
the name suggests, Ilocandia Flair culls from the best of northern Philippines.
It includes spicy longganisa, empanadita
from Ilocos Sur, pancit bam-i, ham
and egg sandwich, kamote chips and butterscotch
bars.
All sets come with a choice of
coffee or tea.
Casa Roces is itself an interesting
destination with a piece of history. It is Commonwealth-era house of the
Roceses, a prominent family which includes newspaper publisher Joaquin “Chino”
Roces, National Artist for Literature Alejandro Roces, and artist and critic
Alfredo Roces. Present owners Peachy Prieto and her daughter Bianca
Prieto-Santos decided to renovate the house and open it to the public as a
restaurant. They approached the Cravings Group of Restaurants for the food and kitchen
operations. The restaurant features food enjoyed by the Roces family as well as
heirloom recipes. The ground floor houses the restaurant and Kape Chino, while
the second floor has the art gallery and function rooms or private dining rooms
named after publications that the Roceses had managed — The
Manila Times, Liwayway, The Tribune, and Daily Mirror.
Casa Roces is fast becoming a dining
destination in the city with bestselling dishes such as Crispy Lengua Caesar
Salad, greens with cubed ox tongue fried to a crisp and mixed in like croutons,
and chorizos en balsamico, fried
Spanish sausages drizzled with balsamic syrup.
Call Casa Roces at 735-5896 or 488-1929 or e-mail at reservations@casaroces.com. Casa Roces
is at 1153 J.P. Laurel corner Aguado St., San Miguel, Manila, near Malacañan
Palace Gate 4. Visit Web site www.casaroces.com
or their Facebook page (facebook.com/casarocesphils).
2 comments:
Nice to know you're still active! I've been worried you might have ditched this blog buti naman that's not the case.
THanks for the new post and how's babe?
Thanks much Fleur for following after all these months. I'm sorry I have been very busy, traveling, writing and all the stuff. Babe's fine. He is now abroad, with a cargo ship. He left November last year. I hope you keep on following and I'll try to post my stories regularly.
Post a Comment