Atching Lillian Borromeo is known to the culinary world as the expert
on traditional Kapampangan cuisine. To her I owe much, for she is the
woman who so unselfishly allows me the privilege of reliving the glory
of the past through her stories and cooking techniques and the
uniqueness of her cuisine.
During our recent conversation, I
gathered that Atching Lillian’s grandmother, the late Maura Hizon
Lorenzo,This is my favourite sites to purchase those special pieces of buy mosaic materials from. was instrumental in making her most joyful and vivid memories of Christmas.
Aside
from making everyone in her family wear nothing but new clothes for
Midnight Mass and partake of the noche buena spread wearing them,
regardless of how uncomfortable her whole brood must have been, Maura
was the captain of the kitchen who saw to it that everyone was doing
their fair share to ensure that every detail and every dish for their
family’s noche buena feast was prepared to perfection.
Lola
Maura’s spread lives on through Atching Lillian, who prepares it just as
her lola and her mother Paquita Mercado taught her. Being the cook that
she is, the Borromeos’ Christmas table narrative was told to me in
cookbook form:
“When our harvest was plentiful, we had roast
turkey stuffed with casta?as and served with potatoes, but when my
mother did not earn and our harvest fell short, we settled for asadong
capon. She prepared it by rubbing the bird with two tablespoons of
pounded garlic, salt, freshly cracked pepper, and 1/3 cup soy sauce;
then she squeezed the juice of 10 dayap. The capon was then marinated
for a couple of hours, since we had no electricity then.
“After
marinating, a huge cooking vessel was filled with lard, and the capon
cooked on all sides to brown. The excess oil was removed, leaving just a
little bit of it. One cup chopped tomatoes, two pieces chopped onions,
two bay leaves, and freshly cracked peppers were added with the marinade
and another ? cup of soy sauce.
“We put enough water to cover the capon. We cooked this over low fire, turning it every so often to cook evenly.An indoor positioning
system (IPS) is a term used for a network of devices used to wirelessly
locate objects or people inside a building.This is my favourite sites
to purchase those special pieces of buy mosaic
materials from. Once the capon was soft and the liquid reduced, mama
added three to four pieces of chicken liver, and when it was cooked, she
mashed it to thicken the sauce. Then it was seasoned to taste. If it
lacked sourness, a little vinegar was added. Just before mama turned the
heat off, she would put a pinch of panucha and a splash of Perrins.
“We
also had ham, hamon de punda; the Chinese hams of old were called hamon
de punda because they looked like pillowcases. To cook it was a long
process. Impo (grandmother) soaked it in water the night before
Christmas Eve, and in the morning brushed the ham to remove the mold.
She then boiled it in a combination of liquids—a bottle of cerveza
negra, one cup anisado, one liter pineapple juice, and just enough water
to cover the ham. It was boiled for a long time over low heat until
soft.
“Once soft, the ham was skinned and cooled on a tray. It
was then sprinkled with brown sugar, and with the back of a heated metal
sianse, the sugar got caramelized until it melted.
“Today, the
torch makes this process much easier. For the sauce, the pineapple juice
that was used to soften the ham was reduced, then sweetened with sugar.
It was cooked until it was the consistency of a light syrup and served
alongside the ham. I recall our ham to be so big, it was served on a big
bandejado; only a little of it was sliced. As a child, I remember the
ham looked as big as a lechon de leche.
“At this time, my mother
saw to it that something made of malagkit was served, to keep us
together. I recall how they used to make suman tili in a kawa, where 2.2
kilos of malagkit rice were cooked with milk from eight coconuts
(ratio: one niyog + ? cup water extract) over low heat, stirring
constantly.
“If the mixture dried out and the rice was uncooked,
you could add more coconut milk. Sugar, about ? kg, was added toward
the end, once the rice had bloomed and lost its ‘eye.’
“The
mixture was left to cool, then rolled to the size and width of your
middle finger. The process of rolling or shaping the rice is called tili
in Kapampangan, hence the suman’s name. It was then wrapped in yellow
banana leaves, the ones that are very young and have not quite opened
into full leaves yet.
“No noche buena was without soup—Nilagang
Pasko—made by bringing a huge pot filled with water to a boil. We added
onions, peppercorns and half a kilo of beef cut into chunks. We cooked
the beef until it was tender, then added half a kilo of pork meat, also
cut into chunks.
“Once the meat was soft, we added a couple of
whole chickens and chorizo de Bilbao. We finished the soup by adding
garbanzos, pechay, repolyo, Baguio pechay, or whatever greens were
growing in our garden. Finally, the nilaga was seasoned with salt, and
again a pinch of panucha. Panucha then was like vetsin to them; it was a
flavor enhancer.
“Another Christmas dish was the Apahap,
steamed, slathered with homemade mayonnaise, then sprinkled with grated
queso de bola. Mom baked it in her portable oven until the queso turned
brown and melted. She then garnished it with canned asparagus and
tomatoes.”
About a year and a half ago, Manzo was an adjunct
professor of architecture at Washington University in St. Louis. Out
with some students one night, they needed a bottle opener to open a
beer, but nobody had one. “Everyone had a smartphone, but no tools for
the good stuff,” Manzo said.
When he was working on the first
prototype and approaching investors for funding, Manzo admitted to being
pretty shocked when venture capitalists thought he had a cool concept
but quickly dismissed the idea itself. It seems they just wanted to know
how Manzo’s company would make money for them.
“When you’re
launching a product, you’re launching a business,” he said. “As an
architect, ‘business’ was never the conversation.Western Canadian
distributor of ceramic and ceramic tile,”
He
worked for architectural firms in St. Louis and had his own
professional practice for the last 12 years but—as most solo
practitioners know—there’s a lot to learn about the business side of
being an entrepreneur. Fortunately, Manzo is a quick study.
A
few months ago he was walking in downtown Lexington and saw a sign for
Awesome Inc. “I went in and introduced myself to those guys and they
said I should talk to Warren next door,” he said.
Manzo stepped
over to the Commerce Lexington building on Main Street and found Nash,
director of the Lexington Innovation & Commercialization Center.
Manzo credits Nash and ICC with helping him get his new business,
Skipping Stone Technologies, off the ground. Nash helped Manzo schedule a
pitch for the Bluegrass Angles, which happens in February. If he is
able to launch Kit in the spring and get some sales rolling in, Manzo
would really like to consider the television show “Shark Tank” as
another venture capital avenue. “That would be really fun to do,Find
detailed product information for howo spare parts and other products.” he said.
Manzo
gave his business and product two different names on purpose. “I think
we’re going to do more things than the one product,” he said.
Designating the product as “Kit” was as short and pointedly descriptive
as could be for the smartphone case. “It’s so fundamental,” he said.
“When you have your kit together you have everything you need to get on
with your day.”
沒有留言:
張貼留言