Recipes by Cafe Metro

In Makati, where affordable dining can be had mostly in fastfood places or foodcourts that serve extremely oily dishes, you are lucky if you find a place that serves a fusion of Asian dishes that are delicious and reasonably priced at the same time.

In Greenbelt 3, there is a small and unassuming restaurant that can easily be missed by an expecting diner. The place is ensconced between Good Earth and the now closed Cascada. Looking at it from the outside, you would not expect that the dishes would cost you just above a hundred bucks. And its easy to share a meal with someone else so that you can split an already low cost meal even further.

This is what my friend and I did when we had lunch the other day at Recipes by Cafe Metro. We ordered their famous Crispy Tilapia, paired it with the Catfish Mango Salad and ordered some spicy squid on the side.

Crispy Tilapia

The Crispy Tilapia, although not original, is THE dish I know to be most associated with Recipes. Many rave about how good it is and many others order it in every visit. The tilapia has been coated with corn starch before it was deep fried, I am guessing and this is the reason why it remains crispy long after it has been served at your table. My friend even commented on how the fish was not even warm (like newly cooked) when it arrived but it was indeed crispy. Trust my mom to teach me that corn starch trick although I have never tried it myself.

Catfish Mango Salad

More than the delicious Crispy Tilapia, I must say that the Catfish Mango salad should be the one that everyone should be ordering. It consists of thin strips of very sour green mango, topped with onions, tomatoes and flakes of fried catfish. Imagine a similar salad topped with crispy pork rinds. Well this is the healthier equivalent (I think).

Spicy Squid

I will not elaborate on the spicy squid as I have definitely tasted better ones. The squid was lightly breaded and covered with chili sauce. Nothing special. Nothing new. Nothing extraordinary.

But I guess this is what is great about Recipes. It takes the simplest dishes and creates a different concept with it. The best thing about it is that these new ideas will not cost you an arm and a leg. Enjoy!

Recipes by Cafe Metro
2/F Greenbelt 3, Ayala Center
Makati City
Tel. No: 728-0917

Making crispy chicken fingers

Breaded chicken fillets, chicken fingers, crispy chicken fingers. They all sound the same to me. Yaya used to make these a lot especially when there was not enough time to concoct some fancy dinner for the family. Its quick, easy and tasty. Pair it up with some mushroom gravy or even just plain ketchup and you’re in fastfood heaven.

Now our version of fried chicken fillets used to consist of chicken pieces coated in eggs and flour. Somehow it never turned out quite as crispy as those that I have when I order them from Friday’s or Chili’s. Mostly they turn soft and soggy although still tasty.

Then I saw a recipe in Yummy magazine that featured easy to prepare children’s meals. The recipe used corn flakes as breading for the chicken fillets. Apparently this trick is what makes it crispy. So we tried it at home and indeed it was as I had imagined it to be and more. Since the corn flakes we bought were frosted, there was an additional ummph in the flavor of the chicken pieces. My kids love it and I actually feel like a kid eating it. I would like to share to you just how easy it is to make this..

Ingredients:
1/2 kilo chicken breast fillets (or you can use thigh fillets)
1 pack of Kelloggs frosted cornflakes
1 cup of milk
1 egg, beaten
salt and pepper

Procedure:
Cut the fillets into 1 and a half inch pieces. Rub some salt and pepper for seasoning. Combine the egg with the milk and mix well. Put a lot of vegetable oil in a frying pan and put on high heat. Dip the seasoned chicken fingers in the milk and egg mixture then cover with corn flakes. Place in frying pan and cook until golden brown. Take the chicken out of the oil and place on paper towels so that it can absorb the excess oil. Serve with steaming white rice or garlic mashed potatoes. Enjoy plain or with gravy (I think ketchup totally destroys the flavor).

crispy chicken fingers

UCC Cafe Terrace

UCC Coffee

I try not to pass up an invite for coffee on any day. Couple that with a trip to a famous mall that I have been longing to go to and I have an excuse to wake up early on a saturday and drive all the way to Trinoma in Quezon City.

It was a glaring hot saturday when my husband and I went for coffee at UCC Cafe Terrace in Trinoma. This is I think the third time I went to UCC. I can clearly remember the two other times I did. One was during an office meeting and another for a team lunch. Both in the Paseo Center branch in Makati. Both times were truly enjoyable and I recall - I thought, expensive.

I learned that UCC grows their own coffee beans which is the source of the coffee they serve in their cafes. They have plantations in Indonesia, Hawaii and Jamaica where they also have their own classificadores or cup tasters. Imagine total control over the creation of a unique taste for coffee that remains consistent in every branch. Now I understand why their price is way higher than CBTL or Starbucks.

First on the agenda was some coffee tasting. We were first made to try UCC Blend which is the house coffee made with a variety of beans and different types of roasts. It came in siphon apparatus that reminded me of my old high school science lab. Although I am a coffee drinker, I rarely drink my coffee black. So I put some muscovado sugar and special cream. I was told that they offered a cream specially made to compliment their coffee. I observed that the cream was not smooth and silky like those you would commonly see in other cafes. I cannot say exactly if the cream really made a difference as I have never tried UCC coffee with another brand of cream. The UCC Blend though was milder than what I am used to. The cream and sugar actually overpowered the taste and aroma of the coffee. Hmm. I was looking for something a bit stronger.

UCC creamer

The second one we tasted was the Sumiyaki. This coffee blend is made from charcoal roasted beans. Not that it was roasted using charcoal but rather roasted until the beans turned charcoal in color. Ok ok, youre not stupid. Hehe. Just by the smell coming out of the small cup excited me. It was so aromatic. The taste of this blend was sweeter, bolder and fuller in flavor. I loved it so much.

UCC Blend

The last cup served the famous and expensive Blue Mountain coffee. Of course I have heard of this type of coffee before although I have always wondered why it was so expensive. I learned that Blue Mountain coffee is expensive because the coffee beans come from only one place, in the Blue Mountains of Jamaica. The climate and soil in that area is very much ideal to producing the perfect coffee beans. So perfect that this type of coffee has to be certified by the Coffee Industry Board of Jamaica before it can carry the name Blue Mountain. The taste is less bold than Sumiyaki but more compatible with my coffee tongue (did I say that right?).

After waking us up to three tiny but strong cups of coffee, we were served our choice of breakfast. Hubby got the Sausage and Waffles and of course I got the American Breakfast with Bacon. I don’t have to elaborate on the sausage or the bacon but let me just say that their waffles and toasted bread are unexpectedly good. Unexpected because both were packed not light that you truly get a full one for every bite. I usually get bread that is light and airy that you really can finish two slices in one sitting. This time, I finished two slices not because I could but I was so enamored by the taste and texture of the bread.

American Breakfast

It was interesting to note that UCC serves dishes by the book. Meaning their food is cooked from tried and tested recipes that apparently even a five year old can follow. This makes it easier for them to rotate the staff from serving, to bussing, to cooking. The staff you will notice will be mostly female as the company banks on the fact that women are more naturally nurturing and would make good cafe staff. Hmm.

UCC Coffee Jelly

If the food was scientifically conceptualized, the dessert definitely was not. This is where UCC in Manila become different from the other franchises all over the world. The desserts served at UCC is the creation of a famous baker who happens to be the wife of UCC’s owner Hubert Young. Hint hint. Think Xanadu, Frozen brazo de mercedes. Karen Young is the baker behind UCC’s delicious desserts that make the coffee experience go up a notch.

A unique dessert served was the coffee jelly. Sounds totally unoriginal and looks harmless and tame right? But what appears to be a simple dessert made of gelatin is actually part of a complex process of cold brewing their signature coffee blend using a dutch machine and then frozen into coffee jelly. What you get is real coffee tasting jelly which is sweetened by the whipped cream it came with.

Kitkat Chocolate Mousse

Of all the desserts served, I like the Kitkat mousse the best. The chocolate mousse was encased in shell made with ground chocolate kitkat wafer. It was not too sweet and the wafer shell provided the texture to the whole cake. I did not like the blueberry cheesecake because it was too sweet and rich. I imagined it to be a whole chunk of cream cheese out of the box placed on top of a graham crust and topped with blueberry. If it wasn’t that was what it tasted like.

blueberry cheesecake

I think UCC offers a different coffee drinking concept than what most people are used to. It makes you sit down and enjoy your coffee by enticing you with the many dishes they offer. It certainly makes you stop and smell the aroma of delicious coffee which is totally different from the fast paced life other cafes cater to.

UCC Cafe Terrace
Lobby Level Trinoma, North Ave. cor. EDSA
Quezon City, Metro Manila
Tel No: 900-6518

Secret Recipe

The Secret Recipe is an award winning global cafe that was first formed more than ten years ago. Although several of its awards include Best Restaurant or Best Casual Dining establishment, the place is more popular for their selection of desserts especially their famous cheesecakes.

Their chosen name makes me think of a homey place that serves comfort food that will make you keep coming back. This thought though stops with the restaurant’s name.

I admit that it was my idea to have our high school "barkada" (a.k.a girlfriends) reunion at the Secret Recipe in Shangri-la Mall. I grabbed at the opportunity for lunch out with my friends plus the chance to try out this much talked about place.

My first thought as we entered the place was actually impressive. The colors and decoration were funky in a splash of red and white. The vibrant ambience created a feeling of youth and life to say the least. There were pictures of the food they offered that hung on the walls and my mouth watered at the thought of subjecting my taste buds to the dishes that my eyes feasted on.

I was debating between ordering the pasta carbonara and the dory with lobster sauce when I heard the server say they did not have both prawns and lobster sauce in stock. That made me scramble to pick another dish which took me another 30 minutes as I could not find one that really catered to my mood at the time. I settled with the Caribbean style sea bass in cream sauce thinking that at least I was getting premium quality fish. I ordered Spaghetti Bolognese for hubby and kid’s portion of it for my eldest son.

bolognese pasta
Bolognese Pasta Php 180.00

The Bolognese pasta was described to be butter spaghetti noodles topped with minced beef (or chicken) and mozzarella cheese. It appeared as described when it was laid down in front of my husband. His expression after the first forkful contradicted the assumption that it was good. Thinking my hubby was just being picky, I urged my kid to eat his. He put a big portion into his mouth with excitement. And then he looked at me and crinkled his nose. Uh oh. My kid obviously did not like what he was eating. He reached out for the fries that we had earlier ordered and stuffed his mouth full with it.

I was surprised because kids always like spaghetti. Ok, I braced myself and spooned the sauce inside my hesitant mouth.  Hmmm. Ok. Weird. I could not tell what I was tasting. Sure there was the beef, and definitely some tomato sauce, but I could not pinpoint why it did not taste at all like Bolognese. I looked closer and saw some bits of what looked like carrots mixed in with the ground beef. I tried to look for other stuff that would have altered the traditional ragu taste but it looked like the normal red sauce to me. Whatever it is, it did not work for me, my hubby and my kids (oh even yaya hated it).

caribbean sea bass
Caribbean Sea Bass Php 350.00

The fish was unceremoniously lacking in any kind of presentation. My first impression was bland and lifeless, not even ordinary. The size of the fish smothered in pesto cream sauce overwhelmed the small plate that I wondered how the big leaf of lettuce managed to fit in. I meant, the big leaf of wilted lettuce softened by the dressing it was dipped in. For 300 bucks, I expected more. I did not get it. Although what it lacked in presentation it certainly made up in taste. The pesto cream sauce was unusually light but tasty. The sauce made the dish bearable as I hardly tasted the fish which disappeared underneath all the sauce. I could tell hubby loved it as he finished almost half of it (or maybe he wanted to get the Bolognese out of his mind and mouth).

Not wanting to end the experience with such disappointing fares, I convinced my friends to order dessert. I personally selected caramel cheesecake. The cake looked so smooth and pristine inside the glass display together with all the other seemingly yummy dessert selection. It did not disappoint. Our frowns turned into grins as my kid and I tried not to finish the whole slice of cheesecake as we promised everyone we would share the desserts. I was forced to take home a slice as I could see my kid was still salivating over the leftovers.

caramel cheesecake

I wish that Secret Recipe would evolve into truly the award winning restaurant it so clearly boasts of. Although their desserts were top quality, they marketed their place as a restaurant rather than as a dessert place. And really if you came for the food and found it inadequate, do you think a good dessert will make you forget it? I don’t think so.

Secret Recipe
Level 5, Shangri-La Mall,
EDSA corner Shaw Blvd.,
Mandaluyong City
Tel. no: 637-0367

Cyma Greek Taverna

You would be surprised to know that although I love to eat and I mostly eat anything or at least try anything, I am extremely hesitant about anything that appears to contain a variety of spices I am not familiar with. Take Indian food. It would probably be the last food I will try, personally. Not that I have had the opportunity to try it but I have seen and smelled the spices that they use in their dishes that I have learned to stay away from it (my loss truly).

So when I was invited to eat at a Greek restaurant, I took a deep breathe before saying yes. I was promised a different and delicious dining experience that it was not long before I became convinced. 

We went to Cyma at Greenbelt 2. The place was filled with lunch diners and the atmosphere was bustling with chatter. We had to squeeze between two groups of people - an all male CEO-type businessmen, and a family of sorts. The air was contagious and soon my spirits lifted with the excitement akin to festival fever.

I let them order as I was not about to pretend to be an expert on Greek cuisine. I just read the description of the items they were ordering just to make sure that there wasn’t something there that I did not like.

saganaki

Saganaki - Is a Greek cheese-based dish that is either fried or grilled. At Cyma it is served at your table with great grandeur by igniting it as all the servers shout "Opa!". I was literally amazed. It was my first time there and it surely beats the usual "Happy Birthday" that is usually done in other places. The Saganaki was served with grilled bread that was a perfect partner with the fried greasy cheese appetizer. Php 180.00.

spinach fondue

Spinach and Artichoke Fondue - After my spinach experience at Cibo, I openly welcome the opportunity to try the different ways that spinach is used in dishes. Again, this dish is smothered in cheese that gives it the tangy and intense flavor that you mellow with the garlic bread or pita. Another winner for me. Php 280.

souvlakia

Souvlakia - this is the Greek version of grilled meat that Cyma served on a stick (like a kebab). It came with the grilled vegetables and a sauce made with garlic and yoghurt. The chicken was so tender and tasty absorbing all the flavor that the roasting brought out. The sauce reminded me of a ranch dressing that lacked the bite. Php 240.

All in all, it was an exhilirating and intensely flavorful lunch. Although the place could do with improved airconditioning, and we went out smelling like gyros (pronounced "year-ohs") ourselves, I would definitely go back and eat there.

Cyma
G/F Greenbelt 2, Ayala Center
Makati City, Metro Manila
Tel. No: 729-4837