Sunday, June 26, 2016

A Fun Event Featuring Kid Entrepreneurs

I was able to attend the Kiddo + preneur event at Shangri-la Mall in EDSA yesterday with the kids that we are mentoring for Hands on Manila foundation and it was certainly a fun event that was filled with sharing, learning and creativity.

Kiddo+preneur is a good platform for kids to learn about the importance of earning one's own money, helps build their confidence and creativity as they are involved in the selling of their products. It also gives them good learning opportunities on investing, running a business and it teaches them that money is something that they work hard for and is not just always given to them.



Seeing kids being supported by their parents at their booths as they sell their products to different visitors is a great experience. It is  also a cool and fun bonding activity for kids and parents.

Our aim at the foundation is to have the kids that we are mentoring learn by example from the kid entrepreneurs at the event since we are teaching them about Entrepreneurship.

We had the kids check the various products, ask the kids who are selling about their products and find out why they are selling said products. Some of the kids we met and talked with are below ten years old and they are really cool, have good product knowledge and are able to sell their products to the booth visitors.

Below are some of the creative and cool kiddo-preneurs we met at the event and highlights during our visit:


The kids from Purple Panda business are very creative and have used their creativity in coming up with useful products such as tote bags and cute pouches. Their mom, Joh, also told us that part of their earnings from the selling activity will be donated by the girls to PGH(Phiippine General Hospital) to help other underprivileged individuals.  They are kind-hearted kids who also value giving back.

Young artists and entrepreneurs at Purple Panda's booth.
Sophia who is 9 yrs. old and her sister Alexa
who is 6 yrs. old love to paint and they were selling
tote bags with printed versions of their paintings..

Tasha who is 3 years old prefers to sell tote bags with
her cute self-portrait.  

Sophia also sells cute pouch bags with animated kiddie heroes
 printed on it.

The cute pouch products being sold by the kids at Purple Panda.

This young girl sells soaps, perfumes and hand sanitizers
that are made by her mom. 

These two kid entrepreneurs are young environmentalists too.
They are  selling turtles since they want to create awareness and
inform people that turtles need to be saved so that it does not
 become extinct. By the way, they get their turtles from
 a  responsible breeder of turtles.

A mom helps her 6-year old daughter sell snow cones
while the 4-year old brother at the back gives free
jokes to buyers.
Eurie, Arianna and Natalie enjoyed their snow cones.

Erwin and RamG  chill out and drink their snow cones.

Erynne sells her yummy baked goodies at the event.
We liked the brownies and bought some for the boys.
Erynne was also prepared to have a photo op
  with  GMK's Erwin(left) and RamG(right). 

The kids also enjoyed the DIY pancake making booth by Maya Kitchen.

Cyan created his own sun -inspired pancake.


Anna, one of the GMK mentors, also enjoyed as
she saw a Disney Frozen pancake mix product. 
We were actually wondering where Elsa is... ha ha ha.

Isaac, Kent and Ivy, a GMK mentor, also enjoyed the
kiddo + preneur event.

The smart and cool kids we are mentoring to become
successful future entrepreneurs.

The kids we are mentoring for the GMK(Galing Mo Kid) program certainly learned a lot from other kid entrepreneurs. As mentors, we encouraged them to ask questions from the kid entrepreneurs and to try the products. They certainly learned and realized that if kids younger than them can have a business then they can also create cool products, sell and earn in the future too.

If you want to know more about kiddo + preneur, you can check out their website on this link: kiddo+ preneur website

Wednesday, June 15, 2016

Placing the Philippines in the World Culinary Map

The Philippine culinary scene is getting better. For the past couple of years more chefs and restaurants in the Philippines have been getting awards.

More high quality restaurants have been opening and excellent chefs based in the Philippines are getting recognized and receive accolades in the world culinary scene.

Two of the restaurants that have helped in placing the Philippines in the World Culinary map are Antonio's fine dining restaurant in Tagaytay and Gallery Vask in BGC. These two restaurants have both been included in prestigious Asia's Best 50 Restaurants list by S. Pellegrino.

Antonio's has been around since 2002 and has been one of the best restaurants to go to for a fine dinner or lunch with friends and family. Housed in a colonial-style mansion that is surrounded by a relaxing and lush garden in Tagaytay, the restaurant offers fine dining cuisine that is truly worth trying and going back for.

It also has a garden lounge area called "Lanai Lounge" where guests can go to for cocktails and drinks prior to dinner.


Antonio's Lanai lounge 

I have been to Antonio's several times with different groups and each visit is truly a culinary delight.

During a get together with good friends at Antonio's we certainly had an excellent time having the sumptuous food and getting the best service from the team at Antonio's.  

Chef Tony Bony Escalante, owner and head chef of the restaurant, also went to our table to ask us if we are enjoying our food. He is truly involved in his restaurant and makes sure that the high quality food and service are maintained. With this, it is no wonder that Antonio's restaurant has made it to the Asia's 50 Best Restaurants list in 2015. It is the first Philippine restaurant that has made it to the list.



Chef Tony Boy Escalante

Our group definitely enjoyed having good conversations while we had our beautiful and delicious culinary dishes from Antonio's. Below are the dishes that have made both our palates and bellies happy:

Antonio's House Salad with raspberry vinaigrette dressing


Soup with quail egg

Pommery Rubbed Roasted Rack of Lamb

Bourbon Madagascar Pepper Glazed
Kurobuta Pork Belly with Polenta


Grilled Dry Aged Certified Angus Prime
Ribeye Steak 
Everything is served perfectly at Antonio's. Since my friend and I shared the ribeye steak, our waiter also made an effort to serve us individually and using nice plating.

Steak served for an individual

Spinach Casserole


Pancetta Spatzle

Felchlin Dark Chocolate Tart infused with
 Jade of Africa Tea with Poached Orange

Flourless Chocolate Cake with Cerveza Negra Ice Cream
and Salted Caramel

Antonio's remains to be one of the most beautiful places to visit in Tagaytay for a relaxing dinner or lunch with friends and family. The beautiful garden and elegant interiors of the colonial house certainly makes the experience worthwhile.



To know more about Antonio's restaurant, here is the link to their website: Antonio's restaurant site


Another game changer in the culinary scene is Gallery Vask.

Gallery Vask is a constantly evolving art space and restaurant that was launched from a collaboration between Chef Jose Luis "Chele" Gonzalez and artist and architect Juan Carlo Calma. The space features curated artworks and an exclusive 20-seater fine dining area.

Chef Chele is Spanish but he is currently based in Manila. He has worked for the world's well-known and high quality restaurants such as Andrea Mari, Arzak, El Bulli, El Celler de Can Roca, Nerua-Guggenheim, and Mugaritz, where he honed his culinary skills.


Chef Chele Gonzalez

source: galleryvask.com

The cuisine at Gallery Vask is modern Spanish with a Filipino twist. Chef Chele, who is inspired by his travels in the Philippines, includes some local ingredients in the dishes that he creates. It has been awarded as one of Asia's 50 Best Restaurants by S. Pellegrino in 2016.

Gallery Vask opened in Manila in 2013 and has been a culinary destination for people who love art and fine food. My memories of eating at this restaurant include sharing a a huge portion of perfectly cooked ribeye steak with friends and trying their various delicious tapas too.

True to its name, the restaurant also presents food in an artistic manner. They offer degustacion menus. Below are some of the dishes they offer:


Cochinillo

School of Peas and Toothfish

Foie in a Rock


To know more about Gallery Vask, check out their website: Gallery Vask Restaurant

I certainly look forward to more Philippine restaurants making it to Asia's 50 Best Restaurants list in the coming years as more Philippine based chefs continue to pursue their passions and innovate to create wonderful and world-class culinary delights. Cheers!

Monday, June 6, 2016

Inspiring Life Lessons from Anderson Cooper and Gloria Vanderbilt's "The Rainbow Comes and Goes"

I recently read the # 1 New York Times bestseller book entitled “The Rainbow Comes and Goes”. The book is a memoir that features a touching and honest dialogue between Anderson Cooper and his mom, Gloria Vanderbilt.

The Rainbow Comes and Goes
book cover

source: amazon.com


Anderson Cooper is a well-known journalist, CNN correspondent and the anchor of the Anderson Cooper 360 degrees on CNN. He has won numerous journalism awards and nine Emmys.

Gloria Vanderbilt is an American artist, writer and designer. She lives in New York, has written eight books and has been a regular contributor to the New York Times, Vanity Fair, and Elle.

The book takes an unconventional and deeply personal approach on Gloria Vanderbilt’s way of sharing life lessons to her son, Anderson. Both share their private thoughts and the hard-earned truths they have learned from life. The contrast as well as similarities between Anderson and Gloria’s personalities and the exchange of conversations on their views on life, love and loss makes the book an interesting read.

The inspiration behind the book is that Anderson did not want anything left unsaid between him and his mom, Gloria Vanderbilt. With this, he decided to have a new kind of conversation with her when she turned 91 years old.  The dialogues they had is more about her life and not the mundane details but the things that really matter. He even recalls the first email that his mom sent her on the morning of her birthday and how it changed their relationship as it broke down the walls of silence that existed between them.

Gloria Vanderbilt’s story is truly inspiring.

Although she was born to a wealthy family, she did not really have a fairytale kind of life.

Her dad was an alcoholic and he died when she was only 15 months old.

Her mother did not really take care of her since her mom just spent most of her time socializing and partying in Paris. She saw her nanny, Dodo, and her maternal grandmother as her mom and dad.

Her grandmother plotted against her mother and influenced her to write letters that would prove that she did not want to stay with her mom and gave her wealthy Aunt Ger full custody of her and ensured a life of comfort for her grandmother.

She married at a young age of 17 to a man who was a gambler and had abused her verbally and physically.

When she was 21, she divorced her first husband, fell in love again and married composer Leopold Stokowski, who was 42 years her senior. She learned later on that her husband fabricated stories about his childhood.

She also had relationships with director Sidney Lumet and Frank Sinatra.

She had two sons from her previous marriage before she met Wyatt Cooper in her 30s. She had two sons with Wyatt and these are Carter and Anderson. Unfortunately, her 23-year old son Carter, suffered from depression and committed suicide in front of her when he jumped off from the 14th floor of their building.

When she went into business in her 40s some of the people she trusted swindled her.

Amidst all the challenges she went through in life, she remained hopeful, positive and did not lose her appetite for life. She is still thankful for so many things including her restless spirit.

Some of the important life lessons I learned from reading the book are as follows:

(1)  It’s never too late to change the relationship you have with someone important in your life. – Anderson Cooper

As Anderson mentioned in the book, “All it takes is a willingness to be honest and to shed your old skin, to let go of the longstanding assumptions and slights you still cling to.”

The honest conversations between Anderson and his mom made him understand his mom more since he learned about her past and the challenges that she had been through. It also made them closer to each other.

(2)  Health is your most treasured gift. As long as you have it, you are independent, master of yourself – Gloria Vanderbilt

Gloria realized how health is important since she experienced getting influenza and asthma before her 91st birthday and was brought to the same New York Hospital where her husband, Wyatt Cooper , was taken by ambulance 37 years ago , the same hospital where he died.

(3)  Have the drive to create and achieve something  on your own

Anderson admires his mom for always having a tremendous drive to create and achieve, unlike many people who inherit money. He is also thankful that his parents told him that he would not be inheriting any money and would be on his own financially after college. He did not feel privileged and certainly had the drive to achieve something on his own.

Gloria told Anderson that his father wanted him to understand money’s value and the importance of hard work.

(4)  Encourage young people to form their own opinions and listen to them

Anderson is grateful that both his parents listened to him and his brother’s ideas and opinions and that they were treated as people who deserved respect even when they were children. He values the fact that his parents encouraged them to form their own opinions and did not dictate or tell them what to do or think since it had a tremendous impact on the person that he has become today. It gave him confidence and a deeply held belief that he was valued and worthy.

(5)  You can break the cycle that was set in motion long before you were born

Gloria Vanderbilt had a challenging and dysfunctional childhood but her experience made her strong and she was able to become a good and loving mother to her children.

(6)  Believe in Love,  be hopeful and grateful

Despite all the challenges and circumstances that had happened to Gloria since her childhood, she still continues to believe in love.  She may have experienced bad relationships in the past but it never hardened her heart as she continues to remain open to possibilities and never lost hope on finding true love. For her, “Love is All”. She also remains thankful for all the learnings she had and the wisdom she gained from overcoming the challenges in the past.

In the book there is a part where Gloria wrote a letter to her younger self (when she was 17 years old) and below is the excerpt that I like:

            Do not get married until you are absolutely crazy certain this is someone you can imagine being with for the long haul. Spend a lot of time with him. Travel with him. Traveling together is the best way to get to know a person.

            Also, fall in love with someone your age or close to it, someone with the same values and with whom you can communicate on every level. Don’t edit your thoughts, feelings, and values to please someone else, express them as they truly are. This is really important, alas, one of my great failings.

            Great sex is, of course, a top priority. Over the long haul it comes and goes, goes and comes, but hang in there. Make every effort to remain faithful, it will make you happier than you already are.

            Oh, and marry someone who makes you laugh. This is perhaps the most important of all.

(7)  “Be kind for everyone you meet is fighting a great battle” - Maclaren

Gloria mentioned that one of the sayings she came across was by Scottish writer Ian Maclaren on being kind.

She believes in being kind to others since there are times when other people are also going through challenges in life but we may not know it since we may believe these people are confident or have not known sadness or fear.

(8)  Be open to learning and trying something new

Gloria Vanderbilt continues to stay active at 92 years old. She continues to paint and express her passion for beauty. She believes that lovely things can happen to a person when you least expect them.

Gloria Vanderbilt

This photo was taken by famous photographer Richard
Avedon in 1953.  It is included in one of his books.

She became a fashion designer when she was 54 years old and became famous for the Gloria Vanderbilt jeans that she launched. She has successfully reinvented herself despite her past by becoming an independent woman who has become a successful designer, artist and writer.

The book is certainly a good read. The perspectives shared by Gloria and Anderson on “The Rainbow Comes and Goes” shows the sincerity that gave them a closer bond.

“The rainbow comes and goes” was from Wordsworth.

Anderson admires his mother’s optimism. Below is a heartfelt message that he told his mom:

            The rainbow does come and go for all of us, but what is remarkable about you is that you still believe it is out there even when you can’t see it, and you keep moving forward, searching for it, even on the darkest of days. That is what you have always done. You believe the rainbow will always return and that, around the corner, a new adventure waits: a man with a boat who might whisk you off to the South of France; a creative project that might become a big business.

“The rainbow comes and goes” means accepting that things can’t always be good but still believing that the good days will come.  An excerpt from the book that resonated with me is when Gloria said to Anderson:

            I find it reassuring knowing the rainbow comes and goes. It helps me accept the way things often are.

            In every life, you have moments of blinding beauty and happiness, and then you land in a dark cave and there is no color, no sky. Then the rainbow returns, sometimes only briefly, but it always does come back. You have to believe that it will, even in the darkest of times. That belief is what is really important.

I would say that the heartfelt dialogues and unfiltered discussion between Gloria and Anderson captured in the book are really touching and inspiring.

 “The Rainbow Comes and Goes” is one of the most inspiring and well-written books that I have read. It reminds us to keep moving forward and have faith especially during challenging times in our lives and remain hopeful that the rainbow will return and lovely things will happen when we least expect them.        








Thursday, June 2, 2016

Bourdain's CNN Feature on the Philippines

Anthony Bourdain, chef, TV personality and book author, revisited the Philippines last December 2015 to do a shoot for a feature on the Philippines for his CNN show Parts Unknown.





I was able to see a video of him sharing with Anderson Cooper what he liked in his visit to the Philippines. One of the things they talked about was his love for sisig, a popular sizzling dish made from chopped-up pig face that is commonly eaten by Filipinos when they go out for drinks with their friends.

Here's the link to the video showing the discussion between Bourdain and Anderson Cooper: Bourdain and Cooper's talk about the Philippines

Bourdain mentioned that for him, Filipinos are "the most giving people on the planet". He knows this since he has a Filipino nanny in the United States who takes care of his daughter and he has seen how the nanny takes care of his kid and even treats her like family.


In the CNN feature on the Philippines for Parts Unknown, Bourdain talked about OFWs (Overseas Filipino Workers). He also visited a Filipina who used to be the nanny of their show's director. He saw how a typical Filipino family enjoys bonding by eating good food like kare-kare and how they find excitement in receiving and opening a balikbayan box(a package sent from abroad by a Filipino relative) that is filled with gifts and goodies.



Bourdain also showed how Christmas celebration in the Philippines is a  big deal. He crashed an office Christmas party and was so happy to eat lechon (roasted pig), one of his favorite food in the Philippines. 


He also tried Jollibee, had halo-halo from a sari-sari store and hanged out with a Filipino band while having beer and sisig. 

He is also amazed at how Filipino bands have the flexibility to sing various songs since it seems that he has never encountered any Filipino band that did not know the songs that he has requested from them.

Here's a video clip sourced from youtube site featuring the Bourdain CNN feature on Manila.





Bourdain enjoyed his visit even if he got stuck in Manila and was not able to go to other islands because of the typhoon. 

He also mentioned about the political history of the Philippines. He also talked with a journalists assigned in Mindanao who shared their view on the country's political situation.

The episode showed the generosity, the sacrifice and the important role that OFWs have in helping the economy of the Philippines. It was mentioned in the feature that the 10 million OFWs from the country is considered as one of the Philippines' most important exports today.

If you want to view the full episode on Manila from Bourdain's CNN show Parts Unknown, please click on the link:  Bourdain's Parts Unknown CNN feature on Manila