Monday, December 12, 2011

The Story of Happy Tummy's Spam Musubi

by Mark Isip





SPAM Musubi is a very popular snack in Hawaii.


As a child, I grew up eating Hawaiian BBQ. Here in the Philippines, Jollibee’s fried chicken is the favorite of most children, and for me, it is Hawaiian BBQ. Of the whole entire Hawaiian BBQ menu, there was one item I would order every time I would eat at the restaurant. This memorable snack is SPAM Musubi.
SPAM Musubi consists of a sliced piece of SPAM on top of a bed of rice, pressed to the size of a block and wrapped with nori; basically SPAM Sushi. As I got older, I started cooking and creating my own recipes for Hawaiian BBQ including SPAM Musubi. My recipes are a twist on the original; you get punched in the face with an awesome mix of different flavors.


Before the boom of food carts and street food markets in San Francisco, I intended to be part of the up and coming trend. Now there are many varieties of food carts. I decided to move to the Philippines for culinary school and found there was the same interest in street food here. So why not bring the Philippines a taste of Hawaii? Midnight Mercato is where I decided to start my journey. My goal is to introduce Hawaiian Cuisine to the Philippines starting with SPAM Musubi and would eventually like to introduce other unique and delicious Hawaiian dishes.


Foodies would love SPAM Musubi because it is a quick, delicious snack you can eat on the go that gives you a Happy Tummy. SPAM Musubi isn’t just SPAM and rice. It is a marinated slice of SPAM on top of a bed of seasoned sushi rice wrapped with nori. You also can choose to add an extra flavor of garlic mayo, wasabi mayo, caramel or chocolate sauce. This isn’t your mama’s recipe -- it's innovation at its finest. LEGO! :D


*http://www.ourawesomeplanet.com/awesome/2011/12/happy-tummys-spam-musubi.html

Monday, December 5, 2011

Unique Holiday Gifts from MONDAY CHEFS KITCHEN: Gourmet, Local & Organic!!!

          In these times that man-made chemicals, including traces of carcinogenic dioxins released into the environment are turning up in fast-food and grocery store staples, people need to engage more on healthier lifestyle, and be pickier on food they will eat.

           In this light, organic farming became a trend on health-enthusiasts for it recognizes the relationship between our environment, our health and the food we eat. The use of pesticides and chemical fertilizers is avoided and high standards of animal welfare maintained.

           MONDAY CHEFS KITCHEN, a group of culinarians and consultants who love to teach, supports Local and Organic Farming and committed to preserving Traditional Filipino Food Culture.

Their very own Kinulob na Itik and Tapang Kalabaw

           For pre-order, advance reservations and inquiries, call (02)975 4454 or email atinfo@mondaychefs.com

*MonDay Chefs Kitchen is founded by Chef Mon Urbano and Chef Theordore Day Salongga, both AHA Diploma in Culinary Entrepreneurship Batch 2007 Alumni.
Check their website at http://www.mondaychefs.com.


Sunday, November 27, 2011

A Delicious Journey of Future Chefs


Taken at Pienza where they had cheese tasting.

          With the mission to nurture our future chefs, once again, we bring our kitchen laboratory to Florence, Italy, in partnership with the Apicius Culinary Institute of Florence.  

            Italy, the perfect place to learn authentic European cuisine and experience restaurant training from leading Italian restaurants, our students were enrolled in the following courses:

Cooking Italy, France and Germany Cuisines
Italian Gastronomy Course
International Internship in Italian Restaurants


            Being exposed with top restaurants at Florence, AHA students were given a big chance to be at par with master chefs at Italy. Students will experience and explore the real Mercato Centrale, Chianto wineries, gelato makers, countless osteria, trattoria and pizzeria!

             Now, AHA students are tomorrow's seasoned great chefs!
             
             Let’s toast for our success!







Monday, November 14, 2011


 
A Message from a Seasoned Great Chef

On 5 November 2011, AHA Philippines held its commencement exercise at Makati Shangrila Hotel.

In connection with this, AHA Philippines gave the Most Outstanding Alumnus Award to Chef Ginney Villar, DCE 2007 Batch.


*Her message*
Good morning, Chef Gene, Dr. Gatchalian, Professors Fernando and Salvador, AHA faculty, graduating class, family and friends. Thank you for the opportunity to address this year’s batch. It is an honor to take part in this happy occasion.

Allow me as well, to take this opportunity to thank AHA for starting me off in my great kitchen adventure.

These days everybody and their uncle, wants to be a chef. Chefs can stand now shoulder to shoulder with doctors, lawyers and engineers. Chefs are hot. Chefs are cool.  And yes, chefs are today’s rock stars.

Look around you. We have our own shows, magazines, clothing line, biographies and not just recipe books. And hey, what do you know, even movies and a musical! I’ve met parents who introduce their kids to me as ‘future chefs’. I don’t think they would have said that with as much pride or promise a decade or so ago. It’s now a legitimate and desirable career.

Chefs get invited not only to cook but to party with the best. People ooh and ahh when you are introduced. We are asked about our expert opinion much like doctors who get ambush consultations during cocktails.

It seems like a charmed life from an outsider’s point of view. Yet few see the scar from the knife that slipped, the soufflĂ© that did not rise, the chicken that got burned, and the less than perfect choco lava emerging from the oven. Nobody sees the real score, because even reality shows will not be bothered by the too real aspects of our lives.  All the world sees is this smiling chef in a pressed jacket with a delicious treat in hand.

But we know better. We are chefs.

I have not been a chef for a very long time, but I’ve learned quite a few things in the course of my work not just about cooking but also about life. If you do not see how your work as a chef affects your real life, then you are missing something very important. There is a reason for everything and why you are where you are right now.

To be a great chef is to be aware of the lessons you encounter everyday. To be a great chef, you have to use those lessons to be a better person. And better persons always make better and eventually great chefs. Because in real life, it is not necessary to be a celebrity, but it is important to be great.
  
So let me share some of my insights with you with a wish that you find use for them in your lives as future great chefs. I call this my Kitchen Decalogue.

1. Eat breakfast.
Breakfast is the most important meal of the day. Without it, you won’t have the energy to last a full day in the kitchen or patience to listen through the rest of this speech. Studies have also shown that you perform better and have less chances of getting sick or figuring in an accident by simply having a regular breakfast.

Nourish yourself in body and mind first because no one else can do it for you.

2. Mise-en-place for life
You cannot run a kitchen if you are forever looking for things. This applies not only to ingredients but to an organized way of doing things from cooking, to employee relations to work systems. This also means knowing your basic cooking skills by heart.

The importance of having everything in place, including your focus and skills, cannot be overemphasized especially when there is a guest screaming through your pass thru window.

3. Be intimate with your ingredients
You can’t be sexy with your dishes if you do not know them inside and out. Do not allow what you already know or how you see yourself, hold you back from trying things. Be bold. Go to market, talk to the vendors, slice your own meat, taste your spices. Cooking is a creative and interactive process between you and the world.

How else would you know what you can do if you do not know the potential of what you have?
     
4. Mangoes take their time.
No matter what you do, you cannot rush a mango and get the same quality. They ripen in their own time even if you cry to high heavens. With an understanding of time and seasons, you will know what to cook and when, what to say and not yet to say, do and what not yet to do.  This knowledge will save you money and heartache.

Everybody has the same 24 hours. It’s how we use it that differs.
             
5. Chef is a four-letter word
Whatever happens the buck stops with you. You cannot blame your mother, the President, your chef instructor or your boy/girlfriend if something goes wrong. There will be days when you just have to take it squarely on the chin and roll with the punches.

Develop the maturity and humility to accept criticism because this will further your education and build your character.

6. Temper your fire.
People talk about all-consuming passions. Do not mistake that for being one-dimensional. Balance is importance. Without a sense of balance, you cannot stand properly, create a good dish or manage a team properly. Even a hot dish needs balance to be a hit—it will have to manifest alternating tones, depth and complexity.

Passion is not about pursuing one thing to your own, your loved ones and colleagues’ detriment. Passion is about living a life with meaning and purpose.

7. Begin with garlic.
In Filipino cooking, we usually start by sautéing garlic in oil to release its flavor. This becomes the foundation of our dish much like a life principle is our starting point. Are you guided by a principle? Is it excellence? Innovation? Sustainability?

Principles will guide not just the quality of your cooking but the quality of choices you will make in life.

8. The plate is your stage.
And that’s how people will know you.  Therefore, standards and consistency are important. You cannot point to your awards and demand to be exempt from a bad dish. Every day is a performance no matter how you are feeling.

There is rarely a take two, because like show biz this is an unforgiving business, so prepare every time you step on stage.

9. Murphy lives in the kitchen.
Do you know Murphy’s Law—anything that can go wrong, will go wrong. Guess what, Murphy lives in the kitchen.

While I say that you will be known by your plate, there will just be days when something will go wrong. Your partner will be a no-show for your biggest function yet, you will overcook the last steak, someone will mistake salt for sugar and waste a whole batch of dessert one hour before service time.

Accidents and mistakes will happen and you just have to forgive yourself. So just square your shoulders, raise your chin and with great dignity intact, go home with half your paycheck.

Education as you know, is expensive.

10.Serve fun.
I remember the slogan of this pizza parlor as a kid which goes, ‘We serve fun…also pizza’. It’s probably the longest case of a last song syndrome. It hums in my head many times every week.

Fun is important in its many forms. You should be able to find fun in your work without too much effort. If you have to work too hard at finding fun in this crazy business, do yourself a favor. Hang your apron and go.

Remember, people will pay for good food, but if you provide joy with your food, it will bring them back.

Eating is an experience and everybody remembers a good experience.

As I come to a close, I wish each one of you personal and professional success. As chefs you have been given an opportunity AND the power to contribute to a better tasting world.

Season well.

Thank you for your time.



Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Enter the World of Sous Vide Cooking at AHA Philippines!

      Want to know more about Sous Vide Cooking? Join Chef Philip Golding as he conducts a Sous Vide Cooking Workshop at AHA Philippines on November 11, 2011, 1-5PM.

           Inquire at 892-7372 or 892-7702 to get special rates!










Sunday, October 16, 2011







Chef Irma Policarpio
Kitchen Manager/Sous Chef
Chef Laudico Bistro Filipino 













Chef Paul Samson
Co-owner
The Cookery









Mon Urbano
Chef Consultant/ Co-founder
MonDay Chefs Consultancy













 
 


Theodore Day Salonga
Culinary Consultant/ Co-founder
MonDay Chefs Consultancy 
COOK Magazine Contributor







 
Giney Villar
Chef and co-owner
Adarna Food and Culture Restaurant








Saturday, October 1, 2011

AHA Joins the America in 3D Road Show

     After American in 3D in Quezon City last March and in Baguio in July, the U.S. Embassy brought American in 3D featuring variety of events in Cebu on 16-18 September 2011 at SM City Cebu North Wing.
     Events include Musical and Dance performances of American genres: blues, country music, hip-hop, Broadway, and modern day best hits. Free samplings of American food, information about US Visa application and how to study in the United States, and sort of Resume Fair of American companies.
     One of the highlights of the show was the cooking demonstration featuring AHA President, Chef Gene Cordova.


Poster of invitation

Chef Gene, explaining the uses and advantages of Sous Vide Machine

Chef Gene preparing the Creme Anglaise

Preparing the blanched vegetables for the seared steak

On plating the poached pear in creme anglaise


AHA booth during the 3-day event







AHA Philippines Open Its Door for the Open House

On 1 October 2011, AHA Philippines hosted an open house. The event included the school and program orientation,campus tour and an interactive cooking demo by Associate Degree in International Culinary Arts student, David Laumond. The programme ended with a snack at Upper East, AHA Philippines' restaurant. The guests also received give-away and raffle prizes.

Mr. Dakila Fernando, Marketing Director, explains why AHA is your school of choice

David Laumond of Assoc 1 shows how he makes his version of pizza dough

Jazelle Carandang, one of the visitors helped the student chefs on preparing the pizza dough

Jazelle (middle) helps David Laumond (left) and Kevin Santos (right) in preparing pizza toppings

Laumond shows his perfectly baked pizza dough

Finishing the pizza

Mrs. Lina Cordova, Guidance Coordinator, on program orientation

Campus Tour

Campus Tour

Snacks at the Upper East


Snacks at the Upper East





Friday, September 23, 2011

HAPPY TUMMY

     We started our Happy Tummy-Hawaiian BBQ stall at Midnight Mercato on September 9, 2011 with a starting menu of BBQ chicken, rice, macaroni and our famous SPAM Musibi. 
     Off the bat we knew that the SPAM Musibi was going to sell. The challenge was to get people to try something they never tried before. I knew that my food is good but one thing lacking on us were decorations and gimmicks. 
     As new vendors, we were still unsure on how many portions we are going to sell. We aimed high for the first weekend. And we brought more than we expected.
     Our location that night was next to two big sellers. Since the stalls are just small, the line over flowed and  our view was blocked but the second day was better. We put more decorations that caught the attention of the visitors.
      This 2-week experience has been amazing. Being a business-minded person, I really enjoy doing things like this. I am planning to continue this venture until mid next year as this will be a great source of income.
      I am very thankful for the opportunity to showcase my talent at Midnight Mercato. This has been my dream for many years now. Now the opportunity is here, I will not give up until I hit it big!

FUTURE CHEFS SPEAK OUT



Maxine Averion
Associate Degree in International Culinary Arts 3

"The training is awesome! They discipline the students very well. All the chef instructors give inspiration to the students. I can say that they really give their best to train us. AHA chefs will be my guide for my future."


 
Elaine Gil
Associate Degree in International Culinary Arts 3
 
"Being disciplined and prepared in everything you do are just two of the things that AHA taught us. These things are the important as these will help us develop confidence and succeed in the industry. Also, being able to work harmoniously with others and working as a team is given great importance in AHA."


Jose Hermoso
Associate Degree in International Culinary Arts 3
 
" AHA, it is literally my second home. The people here are very dedicated to what they do and they ensure that we learn from the best. I found a second family here and I am so thankful that I enrolled in this school. I really would not be the same if I enrolled in another school."



Raezelle Sabillena
Associate Degree in International Culinary Arts 3

" Studying in AHA is fun! You will always be motivated and there are a lot of things you will learn. I really enjoy studying here because AHA has activities for the students. This school is like my second family."



Arian Kazemi
Associate Degree in International Culinary Arts 3
 
" Before I started here in AHA, I had no idea about cooking but when I started studying, I slowly noticed my growth in the kitchen. I grew more than just a cook. My personality grew as well. My future now is brighter, because of all the great opportunities facing me. As the future Executive Chef of our restaurant (Persia Grill), the discipline instilled in me by AHA will surely guarantee my success!"






               

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

 AHA Brings Home the Bacon

AHA Philippines joined the 17th Thailand’s International Culinary Cup by the Thai Chef’s Association on
13-16 September 2011 at Bangkok, Thailand.

David Laumond, bronze for Pizza Free Style
Royceleth Lopez, bronze for Duck Free Style Cooking
The entire Culinary Team


Wednesday, September 14, 2011

AHA Philiipines Offers a New Course!

             AHA Philippines offers a new course for October 2011 class--Bachelor's Degree in International Culinary Management. 
             For more information, please call, 892-7372 or 218-4334.


click photo to enlarge


US Ambassador Harry K. Thomas Jr. Graces AHA Philippines' 2010 Foundation Day Celebration

            AHA Philippines celebrated its 4th Foundation Day on July 29, 2010. The said event was attended by AHA USA President Cindy Reiman and US Ambassador to the Philippines, Harry K. Thomas Jr.
           
Left: Ms. CIndy Reiman, AHA USA, President; Right: Chef Reginald Jame, AHAAlumnus

 Opening Remark by Chef Gene Cordova, 
President and Managing Partner AHA Philippines


Short Message by Cindi Reiman, 
President, American Hospitality Academy, USA 
Message from Ambassador Harry Thomas

cooking demonstration by AHA Alumnus, Chef Reginald James with US Ambassador Harry Thomas
 
Tour around the campus
Tour around the campus
US Ambassador Harry Thomas mesmerized by the elegance of Upper East Restaurant
Jazz Ensemble from the UP College of Music

Awarding of Honorary Chef (a surprise to the Ambassador, if possible where he will be 
     donned with an AHA Chef Uniform and a Toque
Photo opportunity with Dr. Corazon Gatchalian, Chef Gene Cordova, Ms. Cindy Reiman and ______ (L-R)