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Bulacan Food Trip with Erwan, Ninong Ry & Chelsea Manalo

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    - You know, this is weaving,
    so there should be a pattern,
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    but we’re already
    at the fifth step
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    and I still don’t see a pattern.
    You get it?
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    - Yeah. Right now...
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    You know when you're in school
    and you're copying
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    someone's homework?
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    (laughs)
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    And then, at the end of the day,
    you don't know
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    what you wrote.
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    (laughs)
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    That's what's happening
    to me right now.
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    - You're right.
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    - To most, Bulacan is a name
    in a history book—
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    a place you drive past
    on the way to somewhere else.
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    Little do you know
    you were driving by
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    the birth place of democracy
    in the Philippines.
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    From family heirloom recipes
    still served that humble carinderias
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    to off cuts of meat
    that really never go out of style.
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    That's good.
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    To precolonial traditions
    like Puni weaving
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    and river communities
    like Pamarawan,
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    that hold generations
    of untold stories.
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    I'm going to order everything.
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    Bulacan isn't just historic,
    it's alive.
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    I'm here to relearn everything I can
    about this province,
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    its past, how it identifies itself
    in the present,
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    and where it sees itself
    in the future.
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    Searching for a part
    of the Philippines
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    that's often buried
    under overdevelopment
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    and fast-rising buildings.
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    With me are Ninong Ry,
    Chelsea Manalo—
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    Ms. Universe Philippines 2024
    and proud Bulaceña,
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    and Bong Enriquez—
    keeper of culture
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    and son of culinary legend
    Mila Enriquez.
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    We're not just here for the food,
    we're here to uncover
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    the pride, passion,
    and people that make Bulacan
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    more than a page in our past.
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    Our first stop takes us right
    into the heart of Malolos,
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    at a place that's practically
    a landmark.
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    Established in 1970s,
    Citang's Eatery
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    is a local institution known
    for its staggering spread
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    of kakanin (rice cakes)
    and meryenda staples,
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    each one proudly made in-house
    every single day.
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    If you grew up in Bulacan,
    this place is part
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    of your childhood.
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    And if you didn't,
    well, what are you waiting for?
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    So overwhelmed.
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    I don't think I've seen
    this much choice in a long time.
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    There's some menu items.
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    There's hot food for takeaway.
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    There is lots of rice cakes.
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    What is your bestseller?
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    - Mostly rice cakes.
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    - So this one?
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    So everything's galapong?
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    So the kutsinta, palitaw...
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    - Yeah.
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    - Okay.
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    Sapin-sapin.
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    Relyenong bangus.
    They have everything.
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    Tuyo, embutido, siomai.
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    Wow.
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    I'm going to order everything.
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    - Our bestseller rice cake
    is the 7-in-1—
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    kutsinta, sapin-sapin,
    bibingka, tamales, and biko.
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    There's so much,
    because we have orders.
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    We also have riders ordering
    from our page,
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    then they deliver it.
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    We even reach Cavite,
    the ones ordering
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    from us in Malabon.
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    As long as it’s through a rider
    or they ask someone
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    to pick it up,
    it gets picked up.
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    Back then,
    life was really hard for us.
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    We siblings would just
    peddle around.
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    Even when it rained,
    we helped each other.
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    (giggles)
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    - Who was cooking?
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    - My mother before,
    when she was still alive.
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    Because my mother inherited it
    from her own mother.
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    And then we inherited it from her.
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    What she used to cook—
    at first we made rice cakes.
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    After she cooked,
    we siblings would go out
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    and sell it.
    We really struggled.
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    But now that we’ve learned
    the recipes,
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    from this we were able
    to provide for everything,
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    even sending all our children
    to school.
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    We managed to get them
    through with this livelihood.
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    - Every person we've asked
    about Bulacan
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    and where to go in Bulacan—
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    Citang's keeps being repeated,
    and people tell us
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    we have to come here.
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    What's great is they make
    their rice cakes fresh
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    during the day
    so there's a constant batch
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    of new rice cakes coming.
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    So we got some goto,
    some sejos.
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    First time I've seen
    a deep-fried egg called sejo.
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    We have some pork here
    and some tokwa.
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    What?!
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    Who's that for?
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    For us?
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    - Yes.
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    - Wow. That's a lot.
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    (chuckles)
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    I have never seen rice cakes
    in like a pizza box.
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    It's a new thing.
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    - That's all the seven bestsellers.
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    - The seven bestsellers.
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    Wow. Thank you so much.
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    There's no way
    I'm eating seven pieces.
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    This, I can't eat the whole thing.
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    Let's do happy pride.
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    I am a fan of sapin-sapin.
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    I actually like it
    in this kind of small format.
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    I'm used to the big slices
    of sapin-sapin.
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    This is nice.
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    Much, much softer
    than the sapin-sapin
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    I'm used to.
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    The sapin-sapin I'm used to
    kind of...
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    usually the ube layer kind
    of like pulls out and stretches.
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    This one's really nice and soft.
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    I started the segment saying
    I wouldn't try everything.
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    I literally just tried everything.
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    After trying all their rice cakes,
    I needed a walk.
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    As we made our way
    through Malolos Bayan,
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    we passed the storied streets
    of the old district.
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    Declared a National
    Historic Landmark
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    by the NHCP in 2021.
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    These ancestral homes
    have witnessed revolutions,
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    gatherings, and generations
    of tradition.
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    It's a perfect setting
    for our next stop—
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    Bistro Maloleño.
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    Here, Bulacan's culinary soul
    is kept alive
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    through the legacy of one woman—
    Mila Enriquez.
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    A tireless champion
    of Bulaceño gastronomy,
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    Mila spent her life researching,
    preserving, and documenting
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    heirloom recipes,
    many of which would
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    have been lost to time
    without her.
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    Today, her son, Bong Enriquez,
    continues that mission,
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    sharing the flavors
    that once graced noble homes
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    and town fiestas alike.
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    Can you tell me about Milagros?
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    I mean, she's watching
    over us now.
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    - Yeah. She's watching over us.
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    My mom's from Malolos,
    walking distance from here.
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    13 in the family.
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    - Her and her siblings
    and everything?
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    - And all of them,
    especially the men,
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    they would go to market
    by themselves.
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    - Okay.
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    - So my mom was there
    and she got interested in cooking.
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    Well, not for commercial
    or anything
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    but plain house cooking.
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    - Okay.
    - Okay?
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    She married my dad
    who's from Bulacan, Bulacan—
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    Jacinto Ycasiano Enriquez.
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    How did she get into this?
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    Because we have a household cook,
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    old household cook,
    by the name of Ba Pedro.
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    We call him Ba Pedro.
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    Ba Pedro's dad...
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    The father of Ba Pedro
    was the cook of the friars
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    in the convent of Bulacan, Bulacan.
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    - Okay.
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    - You know how
    the friars were, right?
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    - Yeah, yeah.
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    - They love good food.
    - They love to feast
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    and love to eat well. Yeah.
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    - And Ba Pedro became the cook
    of our family,
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    of the family of my grandfather,
    Enriquez household.
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    And so when my mom
    and my dad got married,
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    they stayed
    in our ancestral house.
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    You know, the old style
    of cooking?
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    There was no measuring cups,
    measuring teaspoons,
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    or whatever.
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    - It's just tasa (cup), half tasa.
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    - One pinch of salt.
    You know, the type.
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    Would start cooking
    at around 4:00 in the afternoon...
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    in the morning,
    and he would end up
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    at around 10:00 in the evening.
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    - The whole day.
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    - The whole day.
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    There's fire in...
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    And my mom got interested,
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    because the food
    of Ba Pedro was good.
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    After that, when she
    was interested in getting
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    all of these recipes,
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    because she was from Malolos,
    so she had a lot of friends here
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    in Malolos,
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    and they encouraged my mom,
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    "Why don't you do the research
    of the food
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    of Bulacan, Bulacan, of Malolos?"
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    You know.
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    - And for you, so I'm guessing,
    growing up,
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    you grew up with
    some very good food?
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    - Of course.
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    - So your mother was also cooking
    the food that she put here?
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    - Although, I don't know
    how to cook, okay?
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    But I know the taste of my mom.
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    - I'm used to very sweet
    Filipino ham for Christmas.
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    I'm guessing it's something
    along those lines.
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    So Milagros got to work.
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    She interviewed
    the older generation in Bulacan
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    and talked to all
    the household cooks.
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    Eventually, she had enough
    and she realized that the food
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    in the Philippines evolve
    depending on our history,
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    which is why the recipes
    in her book are separated
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    in historical chapters,
    from precolonial dishes
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    to the post-American period.
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    Bong considers
    this Sunday's best food,
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    dishes that families used
    to gather for after church
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    while being dressed aptly
    for the occasion.
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    On the menu on Bistro Maloleño
    are some of the favorite foods
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    of the historical figures
    of Bulacan.
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    Many of these recipes
    are disappearing,
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    and due to their laborious
    cooking procedures,
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    are no longer being made
    in homes.
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    For us, we had some
    Hamonado Bulaceña—
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    pork ham with caramelized sugar
    done in front of you
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    with a searing hot
    stainless spoon
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    and a pineapple gravy.
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    A dish served to celebrate
    the revolution.
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    Tinola ni Jose Rizal,
    where it was reported
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    by his descendants,
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    he preferred having this soup
    with squash
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    and a little bit of brown sugar
    over the usual papaya.
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    And finally, Pochero de
    Marcelo del Pilar,
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    which was a Sunday favorite
    of this lawyer
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    and leading propagandist
    of the Philippine reform movement
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    against Spanish colonial rule
    in the late 19th century.
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    A hardy mix of pork,
    beef, and lots of chorizo.
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    A statement to Spain:
    your flavors may have infiltrated
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    our palates, but we will still eat
    in the way that we see fit.
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    So when something happens once,
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    you can call it a coincidence.
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    But it keeps happening.
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    There must be a reason
    behind it.
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    Why do you think so much
    has happened historically
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    in Bulacan in terms
    of the heroes
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    that have come out of it,
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    the...
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    you know, the landmark
    kind of constitution
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    that was set here,
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    the dinners that were had?
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    Why do you think Bulacan
    is so important
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    in the Filipino context?
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    - Because there are so many
    historical events
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    that happened here in Bulacan,
    especially in Malolos.
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    The Malolos Congress, you know?
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    And the liberation of Bulacan,
    and so on and so forth.
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    History is the one that...
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    - That shapes the place.
    - Yeah.
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    That's put Bulacan in the map
    of the Philippines.
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    - Is there a strong culture
    here still of people
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    really considering
    themselves Bulaceño
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    and not just a northern province
    next to Metro Manila?
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    - Oh, yes. Oh, yes.
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    A lot of people are saying
    that they're proud Bulaceños.
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    Although we're very near Manila,
    most of the Bulaceños,
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    they worked in Manila,
    they studied in Manila,
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    so you know...
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    But still, they're very proud
    of the heritage of Bulacan,
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    and that includes the cuisine.
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    - The food here was rich,
    heavy, and full of love,
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    the type of dishes
    you come to expect
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    from your grandmother—
    generous in flavor
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    and etched in your memory.
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    None of it would be here
    without the work
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    of another woman—Rheeza.
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    Rheeza Santiago-Hernandez,
    one of Bulacan's
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    foremost culinary
    and heritage advocates,
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    was by Bong's grandmother's side
    taking note
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    of all her recipes
    and making sure
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    that they're properly passed on
    to all Filipinos.
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    Rheeza passed away
    a few years ago,
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    but similar to her
    Aunt Milagros Enriquez,
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    she now lives in the ideas
    and the purpose
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    that she shared with all of us.
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    While history tends
    to tell tales of men,
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    we've seen over and over again
    that women play
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    an equally important role
    in the formation of our nation.
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    A more recent addition to the line
    of Bulaceñas
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    to be remembered
    is Chelsea Manalo,
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    Ms. Philippines 2024.
  • 12:10 - 12:12
    She shook the scene
    when she won the crown,
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    in a country that tends
    to associate fair skin
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    with the apex of beauty.
  • 12:17 - 12:19
    She was born and raised
    in Meycauayan
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    and told us to meet her
    at Francia's.
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    People from all over the Luzon
    make the drive to Francia's
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    just for their fluffy puto.
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    - As long as the rice is good,
    that’s what we take.
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    That’s always what we look for.
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    We don’t just go for something
    just because it’s cheap,
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    then immediately take it.
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    We’re always on top
    of the price of rice—
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    its quality.
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    For one to twenty years,
    I’ve been managing it all.
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    I really never change it.
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    If I can make it taste better,
    that’s what I do.
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    I don’t downgrade
    or look for a lower price.
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    I always go for quality.
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    - You know why Francia's
    is one of my favorites?
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    It's not just because
    it's known in Bulacan,
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    it's also because here
    in Bulacan,
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    we like to feast.
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    When there's always
    a celebration,
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    there'll always be puto
    on the table setting.
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    And then, I grew up
    wherein my grandmother,
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    my mom, my uncle,
    and even my cousins,
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    they all have the tradition
    of bringing puto in the house
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    whenever they'll bring pasalubongs,
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    and the puto is from Francia's.
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    - Okay. Amazing.
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    And this is the first time
    to note...
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    I've actually seen a price
    for 50 pieces
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    which is insane,
    which shows you that people
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    come here and really buy
    in bulk, right?
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    - They have in boxes,
    or sometimes it's in a bilao.
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    - How much is this?
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    - Php130.
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    - Php130.
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    - I don't have money,
    so you're paying, right?
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    - Uh-oh.
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    - I'm the guest.
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    (laughs)
  • 13:51 - 13:52
    I'm the guest here.
  • 13:58 - 14:00
    - My favorite is the cheese,
    but I'll do...
  • 14:01 - 14:03
    This time, I want to try this one.
  • 14:03 - 14:05
    I kind of forgot how it taste...
    the pao.
  • 14:05 - 14:07
    - This is pretty cool, though.
    Like, I've never seen,
  • 14:08 - 14:09
    like a pao...
  • 14:09 - 14:11
    like a siopao in a puto style.
  • 14:11 - 14:13
    It actually makes a lot of sense.
  • 14:13 - 14:15
    - Okay. Let's try.
  • 14:18 - 14:21
    - Very spongey. Very chewy.
  • 14:22 - 14:24
    - And it's sweet, right?
  • 14:24 - 14:25
    Even just the...
  • 14:25 - 14:27
    this part, the white part.
  • 14:27 - 14:27
    - The dough itself.
  • 14:27 - 14:28
    - Yeah, the dough is sweet.
  • 14:29 - 14:31
    - I think puto, in general,
    should be sweet.
  • 14:32 - 14:34
    Yes, it's a rice cake,
    it's a snack,
  • 14:35 - 14:37
    that can be enjoyed
    at any time of the day.
  • 14:37 - 14:41
    But my favorite way to use puto
    is with dinuguan.
  • 14:41 - 14:43
    - Oh my god. Yeah.
    - I love it so much.
  • 14:43 - 14:47
    Because dinuguan
    has that savory, salty, soy flavor.
  • 14:48 - 14:51
    And then, when you soak it up
    with a sweet puto,
  • 14:51 - 14:53
    it just makes so much sense.
  • 14:53 - 14:54
    - Exactly.
  • 14:54 - 14:56
    - So here having kind
    of like a siopao filling in it,
  • 14:56 - 15:00
    kind of gives you that balance
    of sweetness and savory.
  • 15:00 - 15:01
    So it has to be sweet
    in my book.
  • 15:02 - 15:04
    So tell me a little bit
    about growing up in Bulacan.
  • 15:04 - 15:05
    - Oh my gosh.
  • 15:05 - 15:08
    Well, Bulacan, now that I'm just
    going back again
  • 15:08 - 15:10
    and again here,
    because now I'm mostly
  • 15:10 - 15:13
    in Manila but now
    it feels like, you know,
  • 15:13 - 15:17
    I can really tell myself
    that I'm just this small town girl
  • 15:17 - 15:19
    because Bulacan is so small,
    you know?
  • 15:19 - 15:22
    The people here that you see
    will just be the same people
  • 15:22 - 15:23
    again and again.
  • 15:23 - 15:26
    But the people here
    loves food so much.
  • 15:26 - 15:28
    They love to cook,
    they like to feast.
  • 15:29 - 15:33
    It's really family-oriented
    where we're just so proud
  • 15:33 - 15:34
    of our culture.
  • 15:34 - 15:37
    Like, we're Tagalog,
    we speak Tagalog,
  • 15:37 - 15:38
    we love our food here.
  • 15:38 - 15:41
    We're also very famous,
    not just for the puto itself,
  • 15:41 - 15:44
    but pancit, adobo,
    like the traditional Filipino food.
  • 15:44 - 15:46
    - The Tagalog food.
    - Yeah.
  • 15:46 - 15:49
    - Do you still feel
    the provincial kind of aspect
  • 15:49 - 15:50
    of Bulacan?
  • 15:50 - 15:51
    - Of course.
  • 15:51 - 15:53
    The people here are very humble.
  • 15:53 - 15:55
    - There's kind of like a sense
    of community?
  • 15:55 - 15:56
    - Of course.
  • 15:56 - 15:57
    - Like, people kind
    of watch out for each other,
  • 15:57 - 15:59
    whereas Manila is a bit more...
  • 15:59 - 16:00
    (laughs)
  • 16:00 - 16:01
    Doggy dog.
    - A lot.
  • 16:01 - 16:03
    - Yeah. It's a lot to take in.
    - It's a lot. Yeah.
  • 16:04 - 16:07
    - After our puto, we wanted
    something a little more
  • 16:07 - 16:08
    substantial to eat,
    and we had heard
  • 16:08 - 16:11
    of a unique pancit dish
    in nearby Bocaue.
  • 16:11 - 16:13
    Run by a 4th generation owner
    with an ancestral house
  • 16:13 - 16:15
    still intact, it's become
    a cheeky stop
  • 16:15 - 16:17
    for curious foodies in the area.
  • 16:17 - 16:20
    As its name states,
    it's almost 100-year-recipe
  • 16:20 - 16:22
    is said to have been
    an accident
  • 16:22 - 16:25
    where bihon fell
    into a bowl of sopas.
  • 16:27 - 16:29
    When did that idea start
    that this is something
  • 16:29 - 16:29
    that you wanted to do?
  • 16:29 - 16:31
    Was it you were watching
    Ms. Universe
  • 16:31 - 16:33
    where you grew up
    seeing someone
  • 16:33 - 16:34
    that you wanted to emulate?
  • 16:36 - 16:39
    - Pageantry for me
    was never really, you know,
  • 16:39 - 16:42
    in my idea to join that early,
  • 16:42 - 16:46
    because I started in school.
  • 16:46 - 16:50
    But the only reason
    why I wanted to join pageantry
  • 16:50 - 16:51
    because I wanted to sing.
  • 16:51 - 16:52
    - Oh, really?
  • 16:52 - 16:53
    - Yes.
  • 16:53 - 16:56
    So my idea is that,
    "Oh, there's a talent portion."
  • 16:57 - 17:00
    So what I'm going to do
    is I'm going to join a pageantry
  • 17:00 - 17:02
    so that I can sing
    for the talent portion,
  • 17:02 - 17:03
    until...
  • 17:03 - 17:05
    - So you were interested
    just specifically
  • 17:05 - 17:06
    for the talent portion?
  • 17:06 - 17:07
    - Yeah. For the talent portion.
  • 17:07 - 17:11
    Later on, you join again
    in school,
  • 17:11 - 17:14
    in regionals, and then you win.
  • 17:14 - 17:17
    So there's something
    in your head, like,
  • 17:17 - 17:21
    "Oh, you can try,
    maybe in a bigger platform,
  • 17:21 - 17:24
    in a bigger pageant,
    and then there are people
  • 17:24 - 17:27
    who would come to you,
    who would support that dream."
  • 17:27 - 17:31
    And that's where I also kind
    of got an idea
  • 17:31 - 17:34
    of what Ms. Universe is all about
    because of Ms. Venus Raj.
  • 17:34 - 17:37
    Like, she's that woman
    who has a...
  • 17:38 - 17:39
    also a woman of color.
  • 17:39 - 17:40
    - Correct.
  • 17:40 - 17:42
    - So for me, that’s when
    I had an opening like,
  • 17:42 - 17:44
    oh, maybe I can be
    like that too.
  • 17:44 - 17:47
    But it was a while
    because I was in school,
  • 17:47 - 17:50
    so like for me, my priority is
    to just study first.
  • 17:50 - 17:51
    I have to finish college.
  • 17:51 - 17:53
    And then, whatever it is
    that I want to do,
  • 17:53 - 17:54
    then I'll pursue.
  • 17:54 - 17:57
    That's when
    an opportunity knocked
  • 17:57 -
    which is to try Ms. Universe.
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    And I did last year.
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    It was not easy,
    it's very challenging.
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    I want people to know
    that not all women
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    who go through pageantry do it
    just because they want
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    to have a talent portion.
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    No, there's so much more.
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    - To it. Yeah.
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    - You don't just do your talent,
    you talk, you speak,
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    you become an influence.
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    Somehow, one day
    you're in a TV,
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    or you're in a pageant,
    or you're in a stage,
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    you get off of stage,
    there's a girl coming up to you
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    and she will be like,
    "You're my idol now.
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    I look up to you."
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    So that's already something that...
    - It's a lot of pressure.
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    - Yeah. It's something
    that I learned to love
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    along the way,
    because now, people see
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    representation in me.
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    And because I get to talk
    about it more,
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    and with the advocacy
    that I have,
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    then I kind of love the idea
    of what pageantry is all about.
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    - And on that, when did you...
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    Did you ever feel growing up,
    do you realize
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    that people saw you differently,
    or you felt different?
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    - Oh, yeah.
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    - And when did
    and how did that start
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    to manifest?
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    - Well, maybe in my case,
    it was hard.
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    Like, people would always
    see you differently
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    when you're a woman of color.
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    Growing up, I was bullied a lot
    because I was morena,
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    I was darker
    than a morena actually.
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    I had curly hair
    that I don't even like brushing
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    my own hair back then.
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    So it was a challenge,
    because you would get bullied a lot.
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    That there's so many people
    who doesn't know, you know?
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    Because you cannot speak
    for yourself that much,
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    like you would just accept
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    the bullies.
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    But then, like my mom and dad,
    it’s like in one ear
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    and out the other, you know.
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    You kill them with kindness,
    you don't really have to just
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    listen to what they think
    about you,
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    because that's not who you are.
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    Then, just show them
    who you are,
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    what you want to be,
    what you want to pursue in life.
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    And that's when people
    will then know
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    who you really are,
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    rather than what you just
    look like physically.
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    - I think that's...
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    I mean, that's one aspect
    of Filipino culture
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    that's maybe not pretty,
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    that people also don't
    necessarily talk much about,
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    but there are racial biases here,
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    people tend to think
    that people should look
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    a certain way,
    that when you're pretty,
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    there's a Western standard
    as to what that pretty looks like.
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    That changes now
    because now, you know,
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    Korea's really popular,
    so now all of a sudden,
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    it's not just a Western bias
    but there's also
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    an East Asian bias
    to what beauty is, right?
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    - It's kind of...
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    Is it bad to talk about it?
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    - It's fine.
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    Actually, that's what I'm trying
    to break through,
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    because I feel like it's there,
    it's just below the surface
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    and we never really
    talked about it.
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    - Yeah.
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    - And the things
    that are worth talking about
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    make you uncomfortable.
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    That's what I think, right?
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    - So now that we got
    a chance to talk about it
  • Not Synced
    because I don't know
    how many beauty queens
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    you have talked to...
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    - Not many. Actually,
    I think you're the first
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    Ms. Universe I get to interview.
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    - So I don't know
    what the standard was
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    for so many Filipinos back then,
    but now, it changes.
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    Now that their standard
    is saying,
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    "Oh, Chelsea's the standard.
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    No, she's the dark skin."
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    No.
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    I think the standard
    is really yourself,
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    your own beauty,
    your own uniqueness,
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    because, yeah, what they say
    is that beauty
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    is in the eye of the beholder,
    but who are you looking at
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    when you look in the mirror—
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    it's yourself.
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    So that is your own standard.
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    - Thank you.
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    - Thank you!
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    - Thank you very much.
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    So you've never tried this, right?
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    - I have never tried it.
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    - But your mom told you
    it was good?
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    - Yes.
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    My family have.
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    - The name means...
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    - So "alanganin" in English
    means doubt.
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    - Doubtful.
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    - Doubtful. Yes.
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    So it's like, you're really unsure
    what this whole thing is,
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    because... Right?
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    When you think about pancit,
    it's supposed to be dry,
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    but why is it...
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    - Why is it wet?
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    - Yeah.
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    - Why are there
    tamago eggs in it?
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    (chuckles)
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    Why is there liver and sayote?
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    - Okay. I'm going to try it.
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    - I like that the egg
    is very generous,
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    and you kind of have
    a very strong egg flavor
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    which I love.
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    Broth is peppery.
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    - Wow.
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    - Stalk is good.
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    - It's like sopas.
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    - Yeah. Yeah.
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    - But noodles.
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    - Wow.
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    - Like, longer noodles.
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    - I'm going to have you
    more often in these shows.
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    That's exactly what I was
    about to say.
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    - Like sopas, right?
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    - It's like sopas but pancit version.
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    Was the one year
    as Ms. Universe Philippines,
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    was it everything you kind
    of hoped it would be?
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    - Yes, it was.
    And I didn't expect it
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    to be like continuous work.
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    Like, even until now,
    even if it had passed,
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    it's still there, you know?
    The work continues.
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    Like, you work
    with different organizations
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    at the same time,
    and you still want
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    to make sure that people
    understand what it is
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    that pageantry is all about.
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    Like, once you're done,
    it's not done.
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    - A lot of people think
    life is a gradual increase.
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    You get more popular,
    you get busier,
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    you get richer, richer,
    richer, richer.
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    There's this aspect
    that we think that
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    that's how our path
    should be in the world.
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    Thank you!
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    - Wow. Thank you!
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    - It should be linear
    and it should be always increasing.
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    And I think that's why
    a lot of young people
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    now struggle
    with mental health issues
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    and things like that,
    is 'cause we always think
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    there's something better,
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    forgetting that we should also
    just enjoy where we are.
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    And the way I see life
    is not like that,
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    the way I see life is like this.
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    - Exactly.
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    - And so, there are moments
    you'll be very busy,
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    there are moments
    that it'll be a bit more quiet,
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    and etc., etc.
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    And the way I see it
    is the quiet moments
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    just give you the time
    to reassess and get ready
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    for the next busy period
    of your life.
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    - That's good.
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    - Everything you've gone
    through in the past
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    that seemed so big
    was actually so little
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    compared to the big things
    that you can achieve, right?
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    - Exactly.
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    - So in Bulacan,
    do you eat your pancit
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    with bread?
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    - Monay, right?
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    Is it called monay?
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    - Yeah.
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    - Ah, okay. Monay.
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    - You do a full sandwich? Yes?
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    Okay.
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    - I've never done this.
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    - Really?
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    - No.
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    - Oh, no.
  • Not Synced
    (laughs)
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    - Usually...
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    - You need to.
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    - What I know they make here
    is ice cream. Dessert.
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    - So especially
    when it's wet pancit,
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    you'll take the first bite
    and you'll be like,
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    "Why haven't I done this
    my whole life?"
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    Right?
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    - Wow.
  • Not Synced
    (laughs)
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    - She gave me life lessons,
    I gave her
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    pancit sandwich lessons.
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    (chuckles)
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    - Not bad, huh?
  • Not Synced
    - It's good.
  • Not Synced
    - Yeah.
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    - I mean, nutritionally,
    maybe not the best thing for you.
  • Not Synced
    - No.
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    - But it tastes really good.
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    Puni is the art
    of making decorations
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    and packaging
    out of palm leaves.
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    In Bulacan, there's a tradition
    of making palaspas,
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    or palm fronds, for Palm Sunday
    in the Catholic calendar.
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    But even before
    this religious use case,
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    this is a precolonial artform
    that needs to be remembered,
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    and one of the masters
    of this artform happens
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    to live here.
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    So I called another friend
    to join me,
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    as he is known
    for his delicate touch.
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    This is a coconut leaf. Okay.
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    - Yes. So our coconut leaves,
    this is the leaf blade,
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    so we'll remove the midrib
    since it's hard.
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    So the way we remove it is
    from the tip or the very top,
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    you cut a little at the end up
    to the midrib,
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    then you pull the midrib.
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    Just slowly so you get
    all the leaf blade.
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    So hold the two leaf blades
    with your hands,
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    then pull the midrib.
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    You should get
    all the leaf blades
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    because that’s what we need.
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    - Why is mine thick?
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    - Mine, too.
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    (laughs)
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    - This is step one.
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    ***- Right? Step one pa lang.
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    (laughs)
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    - So you really need
    to hold the leaf blade.
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    What you pull is the midrib.
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    - This one’s gone?
    This one’s gone?
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    - Yes.
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    ***- Step one pa lang, bro.
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    - Try again.
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    - Try again.
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    Ninong Ry and I are sitting
    with Jonnah Garcia
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    and Gigi Garcia,
    founders of Punique.
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    They're also advocates
    of this traditional art.
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    Here, they teach other people
    about the art,
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    sell local crafts,
    and help upscale
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    local women to bring them
    a different source of income—
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    everything from earrings
    to food packaging.
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    - So it has support.
  • Not Synced
    - Ah. And then,
    you move your hand down.
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    - So hold it with all your fingers.
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    - It’s like a big snow pea.
  • Not Synced
    - So that’s what you need to get.
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    So your midrib should be clean.
  • Not Synced
    - So how long have
    you been making
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    or working puni arts?
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    - 1996.
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    - Oh, wow.
  • Not Synced
    - 1996.
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    - How old are you?
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    - 36.
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    (laughs)
  • Not Synced
    - No, back then, in 1996.
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    - Ah, 1996! Okay.
    I was six years old.
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    - Okay. Yeah. Same.
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    (laughs)
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    Wait. My math is not mathing.
  • Not Synced
    - So if you see,
    that triangle is also at the back.
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    - Who figured this out?
    You get it?
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    - You know, that’s my question too.
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    That’s when we realize
    how great our ancestors were.
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    How did they invent this, right?
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    - You know what?
    You know what my theory is?
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    All of this could only have
    happened before social media.
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    - Yes. Before internet.
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    - Right before internet,
    because people were so bored,
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    they're like, "We need
    to figure out
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    how to fix this problem."
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    Now, when you have a problem,
    what do you do?
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    ChatGPT.
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    - Exactly.
  • Not Synced
    (laughs)
  • Not Synced
    - Yeah.
  • Not Synced
    - Are we still in step two?
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    - You know what?
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    This is weaving,
    so there should be a pattern,
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    but we’re already
    at the fifth step
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    and I still don’t see a pattern.
    You get it?
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    - Yeah. Right now...
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    You know when you're in school
    and you're copying
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    someone's homework?
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    (laughs)
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    And then, at the end of the day,
    you don't know
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    what you wrote?
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    - Yeah.
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    - That's what's happening
    to me right now.
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    - You're right.
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    - In the traditional forms,
    right, Nanay?
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    But the earliest recorded use
    of palaspas
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    was the leaf fronds,
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    when Jesus entered Jerusalem.
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    - That was what I was
    about to say.
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    - That's the earliest.
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    The earliest recorded use
    of palaspas.
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    - Because in Malabon,
    when we say "palaspas,"
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    That’s the entry of Jesus
    into Jerusalem. Yes.
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    Then when I was a child,
    the palm was just
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    the pointed leaf,
    then we placed it
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    outside the window.
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    As I grew older,
    it became woven into arches
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    or different variations, right?
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    - So this is the tatlong suso
    because you have three corners.
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    - And this is simpler?
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    - Yes. Simpler.
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    - So tatlong suso
    just means triangle?
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    - Yes.
    - Okay.
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    - Three points.
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    - They just really like the word.
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    - Yes. Me, too.
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    I like the word.
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    - The Dubai chef.
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    - Yeah, yeah.
    - Salt Bae.
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    - Salt Bae.
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    Oh, wow!
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    - Thank you.
    - Thank you!
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    - Last time I had a food trip
    in Bulacan, I made sure
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    to pass by Mercy's,
    and I was happy to find
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    that it hasn't changed.
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    - What's this?
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    - Empanada De Kaliskis.
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    - Empanada De Kaliskis.
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    - Good morning!
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    So the kaliskis,
    have you heard about it?
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    - Yes. I've tried doing
    that before.
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    - The clamshell.
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    - Yeah, right.
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    It's like a laminated dough
    in a way.
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    - Yeah.
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    So they're the ones
    who brought it back to fashion.
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    - Okay. Okay.
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    Even before Ninong Ry,
    I've already tried it.
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    My mom liked it
    because it’s something, you know,
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    she hadn’t seen before.
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    And its texture
    was very different.
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    - Were you able to get it?
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    - Yeah.
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    - When you put it in,
    it puffs up, like that.
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    - Mine doesn’t puff up,
    mine’s weird.
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    The one I made, what happens
    is the oil layer melts.
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    So it only leaves the scales.
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    Because when I see other scales
    on the internet,
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    they really look different
    from mine.
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    So I’m excited to taste this.
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    - Thank you!
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    - Thank you!
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    - Good morning.
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    - It's still hot.
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    - It's still hot. Fresh.
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    There's no dine-in
    anymore here, right?
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    - Not anymore
    ever since pandemic.
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    - Look at that.
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    So did you get that?
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    - I got this. Like that.
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    But what I did before
    was so brittle.
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    So I want to taste this,
    because this is the proper one.
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    - All our empanadas started
    looking the same.
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    - Yeah.
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    - It was like just
    the sheen dough.
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    And then, I remember
    started seeing
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    these forms and they said
    you have to come
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    to Bulacan specifically
    to try this,
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    because they make
    the clamshell ones.
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    And all the other ones
    that we've seen,
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    they don't have that rim.
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    There's no lip.
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    This one has a lip.
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    Which reminds me more
    of the Malaysian curry puff.
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    They fold it.
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    - That's right.
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    Oh, yeah.
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    - Wow.
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    - This is way better
    than what I did.
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    The one I made, I also vlogged it,
    mine was oily.
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    This one isn’t—it’s clean.
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    - It doesn't absorb it.
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    - Yeah, yeah. Beautiful.
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    - And then, the stuffing
    is chicken?
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    - Yes.
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    - Chicken. Let's taste it.
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    I was expecting
    that's strongly flavored,
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    but no.
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    What you get is really chicken.
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    - Chicken, peppery.
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    - Yeah.
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    - There's like a nice amount
    of pepper,
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    good texture from the potatoes.
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    - Also, it's not ground.
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    Shredded. It's shredded.
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    - And then, you can tell
    it's been cooked in broth
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    or something.
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    - And its flavor is not imposing,
    it's just there, right?
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    - And the dough is
    as important as the filling.
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    - Of course.
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    - Like here.
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    - It’s not one or the other,
    they really have
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    to go together, right.
    This is delicious.
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    - I really still think
    this is probably one
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    of the best bites
    you can have in the Philippines
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    in such an unassuming place.
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    So when people want
    to try this at home,
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    I really do recommend
    you come here to try
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    to learn how to make it,
    because texturely,
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    it's hard to explain
    how to get this right.
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    - Right.
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    - You see it a little bit here.
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    So people used to say,
    "Oh, it's like croissant."
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    - No. No, no, no.
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    - In terms of the layers, sure.
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    But each layer here,
    especially on the lip,
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    has crunch.
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    - Yes.
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    In a croissant, it collapses.
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    This one, it doesn’t collapse.
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    It’s really crispy, right?
    All throughout.
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    - We have one more stop,
    I think.
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    I've never tried this restaurant.
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    - Okay.
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    - But apparently,
    it is the mecca
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    for people who love tumbong.
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    - Tumbong?
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    - Yeah.
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    - And they tumbong everything.
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    They make everything
    out of tumbong.
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    - I like that.
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    I love tumbong. Let's go there.
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    Tumbongan time!
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    Don’t move, Nanay, it will change,
    it’ll become Erwan.
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    There!
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    - My nephew is a fan of yours.
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    - Say hi to him for me, okay.
    Thank you.
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    - You heard me right.
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    Tumbong, or pork rectum,
    or anus,
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    whatever you want to call it.
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    Just don't fade it.
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    - Tumbongan time.
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    - So are you a fan of...
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    - Tumbong?
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    - Tumbong?
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    - Yes!
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    (laughs)
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    - Tumbungero expert?
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    - I'm a tumbungero.
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    - Okay.
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    - So we’ll eat Tumbong together?
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    (laughs)
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    - So in Bulacan, we've had...
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    we had sinuso.
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    - Sinuso. Yeah.
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    - Today, we had tatlong suso.
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    - Tatlong suso.
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    - And now, we have tumbong.
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    - Yes.
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    (laughs)
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    I'll taste their vinegar first.
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    - It should be sasa (nipa palm)
    since this is the country
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    of nipa, right?
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    - Spicy, tasty, a little sweet.
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    - Rice.
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    - There we go!
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    (coughs)
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    - Oh my god.
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    - Spicy, right?
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    - Thank you.
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    So for our international
    friends watching,
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    tumbong is?
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    - Tumbong is the rectum.
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    (chuckles)
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    For the lack of better term. Okay.
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    Maybe to make it
    more glamorous,
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    it's the poop chute.
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    - It's basically...
    Also, you get...
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    So you get...
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    You know the bulging anus?
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    - Yeah, yeah, yeah.
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    - Right, the...
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    - The almoranas.
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    Yeah, yeah, yeah.
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    The cauliflower.
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    Hey!
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    - Sizzling tumbong sisig.
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    - Tumbong sisig. Okay.
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    - So the reason we came here...
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    This is fairly new.
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    It opened a month ago.
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    And we were waiting for the food,
    because they're not open.
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    - They've opened for Erwan.
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    - Yeah.
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    They opened in an hour
    and a half.
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    But I was just...
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    I thought it was cool to see
    carinderia basically using
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    one ingredient in multiple ways.
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    - There.
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    - Adobo, Bicol express. Exactly.
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    - They have Hungarian tumbong.
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    Oh, that's different. Sorry.
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    (chuckles)
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    It's written there.
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    - Let's try this.
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    - Okay, okay.
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    - So do you have a lot of ass?
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    - Just a bit.
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    My wife loves it, so...
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    (chuckles)
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    There are more.
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    - Classic prito.
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    - Actually, let's try
    the classic first, maybe, right?
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    - Have you been to La Loma?
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    - La Loma in Quezon?
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    - Quezon City.
    The Lechon Capital of Manila.
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    Have you been there?
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    - Yes. But I haven't had...
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    - I think, if I’m not mistaken,
    I once went somewhere
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    and they were selling this outside
    the lechon places.
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    I’m not sure if it was Tumbong,
    but it was something
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    like this, right?
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    And it was kind of expensive
    at that time, I remember.
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    - It's like when you're telling us
    about the sinuso,
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    a lot of people want the cut
    but there's not a lot.
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    In one pig, there's not
    a lot of it, right?
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    - Yeah.
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    - That's good.
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    - This is dangerous to serve
    at a drinking session,
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    it’ll go fast.
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    I think that’s what it’s for.
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    - No fishy smell. Very clean.
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    - No fishy smell.
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    - No, what’s it called, angoy?
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    - Anggo.
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    - Ah, anggo.
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    - That’s good. You know,
    this is by far tastier
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    than chicharong bulaklak.
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    - 100%.
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    - Right? Chicharong bulaklak
    is so fatty.
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    That one is the adobo.
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    - Julius.
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    Julius, my man.
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    - Does Julius also love innards?
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    - He is the innards king.
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    - Mr. Gout?
    - Yeah.
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    - Hey!
    - Hey!
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    Tumbong kare-kare.
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    - Good thing there are vegetables.
    Thank you so much.
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    (laughs)
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    Otherwise, you’d be rushing
    to the hospital, right?
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    - This is good.
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    - It’s so delicious, and so oily.
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    And I think this is
    its natural oil.
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    - That it just comes out here.
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    - Wow. The tumbong oil.
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    - Look at that.
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    A bit of vinegar.
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    That's good.
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    - Thank you.
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    - So the pineapple...
    - Thank you.
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    - Does it help
    with blood pressure?
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    - Yes.
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    - Really? It really does.
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    - You might not see it here,
    but at the back,
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    it’s full of pineapples,
    because they know.
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    - I use pineapple for highschool
    for a very different reason.
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    (laughs)
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    - Tumbong Bicol express.
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    - Tumbong Bicol.
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    There's so much tumbong!
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    How big is the rectum of a pig?
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    How much in kilos is it?
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    - Around half kilo only.
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    - Half kilo only?
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    All the dishes you served here,
    how many pigs
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    do you think that came from?
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    - About eight pigs.
    Because in two...
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    - I'm sorry.
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    - Okay.
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    All right. Thank you!
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    I've never had that much
    tumbong in my life.
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    - Now I understand
    why the pineapple, the garlic.
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    When I've seen tumbong
    in the Philippines,
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    most of the time
    it's in a soup farm.
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    - Oh!
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    - Sibot.
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    - Sibot. Sibot or...
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    It's refreshing in a way.
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    It's not heavy.
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    - It's very light.
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    - There's not much oil slick.
    It's just right.
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    - What is your bestseller?
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    I'm guessing the soup
    and the adobo?
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    These two?
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    - The classic.
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    - Ah, yes.
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    I really like soup.
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    I really like sipping the Tumbong.
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    Why, why are you laughing?
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    Is there something funny
    about that?
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    Look at this Tumbong,
    I’ll sip it.
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    - Okay. Do you still
    have space for dessert?
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    - There's a tumbong dessert?
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    (laughs)
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    I want Tumbong with ice cream.
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    (laughs)
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    - Before driving back to Manila,
    we had to pass by
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    the famous Eurobake.
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    I don't know if it's a mental thing
    or do you feel...
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    - You feel something.
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    - Like...
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    - You feel sticky.
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    - Yeah. You feel sticky
    and a little slimy.
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    - Quagmirish.
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    - I feel like when you eat
    stuff like that,
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    your blood slows down.
    I don't know.
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    - Yeah. That's right.
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    - Like, it actually chunks up.
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    - I don't know.
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    - So let's loosen it up
    with some sugar.
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    - Okay.
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    (chuckles)
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    And some margarine.
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    - So I saw you did a video
    in Eurobake, right?
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    You did like a real here.
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    - Yes.
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    Of course, the inipit
    and ensaymada.
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    - I feel like any province
    you go to in the Philippines,
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    there's always one consolidator.
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    So it starts with them
    making one really strong,
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    emblematic dish
    that everyone wants
  • Not Synced
    to bring home.
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    And then, eventually
    they start sourcing
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    the best of the province
    and end up being kind
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    of like the last stop
    before you go home.
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    - It's like a one-stop shop
    for all the pasalubong.
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    Something like that.
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    - Correct.
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    - You know,
    I don’t really like ube.
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    - Same. I mean,
    I'll eat it if it's there
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    but I don't look for it.
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    - Yeah.
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    Oh! Oh!
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    Their ube is not...
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    - It's chunky.
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    - Yes. It's chunky, it's...
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    You can taste the root crop.
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    - Yeah.
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    - Right?
    - Yeah.
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    Which it should be.
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    - Exactly.
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    - It’s not the pasty kind
    like it’s diluted
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    with some starch, you know?
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    - Have you seen those videos online
    where they're like,
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    "Yeah. Real ube is sweet."
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    - I saw your video.
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    - And then, you're like...
    No. But also, like,
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    there's a lot of US-based creators,
    not Filipinos,
  • Not Synced
    foreigners, and say,
    "Yeah. Ube should be sweet."
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    I'm like, "When did you ever taste
    an ube that was sweet?"
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    It tastes like a potato.
  • Not Synced
    - But to be fair,
    most of us, like, in Manila,
  • Not Synced
    Manila kids, or even
    from adjacent cities,
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    their only exposure to ube
    is the halaya.
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    - Correct.
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    - So you really can't blame them.
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    But if you taste like ube,
    it's closer to gabi
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    than a camote.
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    - Correct.
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    - It's like that.
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    And it's weird
    because when you taste
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    ube flavoring, it tastes
    like the commercial ube ice cream.
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    - It's like the fake ube flavor.
  • Not Synced
    - Yeah. And you'll think,
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    "Where did this come from?"
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    - Yes. Like, who decided...
  • Not Synced
    - Who decided that
    this would be the taste of ube?
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    - Okay. Let's try this ensaymada.
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    - Ensaymada Malolos.
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    - I love ensaymada.
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    - That's really it.
  • Not Synced
    And to be honest,
    with this one...
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    So many claim
    they make ensaymada,
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    but the only thing
    that makes it ensaymada
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    is the butter, sugar,
    and cheese.
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    But it’s really about the bread.
    It’s really about the bread.
  • Not Synced
    - So what, for you,
    is a good ensaymada
  • Not Synced
    in terms of dough?
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    - Fluffy.
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    It should be very fluffy.
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    Like, it should be kind of,
    in a way, yeasted chiffon.
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    I don't know.
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    Because chiffon is
    what comes to mind
  • Not Synced
    when I think of super airy bread.
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    - Like a shreddy brioche.
  • Not Synced
    - Exactly.
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    - Right? Yeah.
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    - But it's not too heavy.
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    You know? It's hard to explain.
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    I’ve also had an ensaymada
    before that I felt they tried
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    so hard to make it light
    that it ended up tasting raw.
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    You get what I mean?
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    The last time I came here, sir,
    when I went home,
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    I finished another one again.
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    (laughs)
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    - One like this?
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    - Yeah.
    - No.
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    I mean, this is a good last bite
    for Bulacan.
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    - It's just right.
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    - Because I feel like
    in terms of provinces,
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    it's kind of how like
    we did Malabon.
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    Obviously, Malabon
    is not a province.
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    And Ry was pissed at us
    'cause we completely forgot
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    that he was from Malabon.
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    (laughs)
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    So that's why we asked him
    to come to the...
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    - I was just there
    when you went there.
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    Malabon and Bulacan are right next
    to each other.
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    Really next to each other.
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    Back then,
    when we biked as kids,
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    there was a sign there that said,
    “You are now leaving NCR.”
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    - Really?
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    - There is, yeah.
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    - Oh, I didn’t know that.
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    - There is.
    And then it was like,
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    oh, we’re already in the province,
    we kids biking.
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    And that’s Obando.
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    - Okay.
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    - I even had classmates so close
    that they studied in Obando.
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    So it was really near us,
    but culturally,
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    especially in food...
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    - Different.
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    - Far.
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    - Yeah?
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    - Really far. Really far.
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    I mean, maybe if we had something
    like this in Malabon,
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    it would be the puto.
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    - Correct.
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    - We had a super light puto
    that I don’t see...
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    - Elsewhere.
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    - Yeah.
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    - I feel like every time I go
    to any province
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    in the Philippines,
    there's always a couple
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    of dishes that kind
    of make you rethink
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    your knowledge
    of every, you know...
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    all the food that we have.
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    - Yeah.
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    - And it just goes to show
    that there's still so much
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    to kind of learn about, right,
    in terms of our food.
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    And not just, you know,
    it becomes trendy to, like,
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    go to Batanes, or go to Basilan,
    and everything—
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    go to these far-flung places.
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    But literally, right next
    to Metro Manila,
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    you have a place like Bulacan
    that has dishes still
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    that kind of, one,
    have stood the test of time,
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    and two, will still surprise you
    in how they're made.
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    'Cause last time we worked together
    was a couple of years ago.
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    Since then, everything
    that's happening
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    in the food world,
    specifically in content,
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    has accelerated so much.
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    Do you think
    we're better off now
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    in terms of people's knowledge
    about Filipino food,
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    in how it's being communicated?
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    Or is it too much?
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    - When I started attempting
    to be a content creator,
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    which was 2020,
    there was a clear distinction
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    between a consumer of content
    and a creator of content.
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    But today, everybody’s
    a content creator, you know?
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    Which I think is a very good thing.
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    It’s a very good thing
    because unlike before,
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    I’d have friends and I’d think,
    oh this is funny
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    for my friends, you know?
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    Now you’re creating content
    for the world to see
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    because everything
    has the potential to go viral.
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    You get it?
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    So I think everyone’s
    becoming marketers in a way,
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    or maybe not stewards of culture
    but like promoters
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    of cultures, you know, in a way.
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    - Yeah. There's a lot more,
    what they call, UGC,
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    user-generated content,
    for everyday people.
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    I mean, perfect example
    is today the...
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    where we just ate.
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    That we found through TikTok
    two days ago.
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    - Two days ago.
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    - Yeah, yeah. We just saw it
    and it just popped off, right?
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    - And they’ve only been open
    for a month.
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    Poor kids, they’ll be swamped
    with people.
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    (laughs)
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    - What did she say?
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    She said we opened...
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    They started opening
    at 10:00 a.m., and then...
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    - Now they're opening
    at 3:00 a.m.
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    - Because they felt like
    they were going to die.
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    (laughs)
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    - It's been only one month.
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    That's really the power.
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    - A lot of these places
    that we went to today,
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    and yesterday, some have
    very clear, you know,
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    we know who's going
    to take over and continue
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    the business.
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    Some were not sure
    if the next generation
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    is going to keep doing it.
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    So hopefully, these kinds
    of videos help promote that.
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    - I enjoyed.
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    - Yeah.
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    - Because I didn’t do
    anything else but eat and talk, right.
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    - Ry puts it perfectly.
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    Bulacan is layered,
    just like this ensaymada.
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    It seems so close
    to Metro Manila,
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    close enough that it could look like
    it's part of it,
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    but thanks to its rich
    and proud history,
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    it feels distinct and unique.
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    As the claws
    of modernization advance,
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    so does the threat
    of culinary gentrification.
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    We can't stop the rise
    of fast food chains
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    or the way recipes
    are shared online,
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    or even how one might prefer
    kimchi over atchara.
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    However, one can be curious,
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    curious enough to ask questions,
    to look at our own backyards,
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    to talk to our neighbors
    and elders to establish
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    a sense of identity
    through our food ways.
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    Across the Philippines,
    every region holds
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    its own nuances,
    shaped by history, geography,
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    and the sublte influences
    of those around it.
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    Each identity is distinct,
    yet connected
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    like strips of puni
    woven together
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    to form something strong
    and whole—
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    a vessel to protect our heritage
    for future generations.
Title:
Bulacan Food Trip with Erwan, Ninong Ry & Chelsea Manalo
Description:

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Video Language:
Filipino
Duration:
48:28

English subtitles

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