I simply remember my favourite things and then I don’t feel so bad …

What can I say? I had a great two-week break back home in the Philippines. As expected I didn't fail to eat all my favourite things. Though sometimes with all my yakking with friends and relatives I forgot to take pictures of some. Fortunately here are a few that I made sure to make kodak of.

My first morning there saw me staring at a plastic bag of bualaw (binatog for the rest of the Phils.). This is one of my all time favourites that I continually reminded my mother to get me it before I flew in. The simplicity of the cooked, slightly sticky corn mixed with freshly grated coconut then simply enhanced by a sprinkling of salt makes me want to eat it all day. Give me more please!

Bualaw or Binatog

Next in line is the venerable karyoka. A snack or dessert (depending on how hungry you are) that is made of fried puffed glutinous rice balls drenched in some sweet sauce made from panucha (a type of muscovado sugar) and coconut milk. Like most of my favourite things - simple but yummy!

Karyoka

That karyoka was delivered via a family gathering held just before I left for the UK. A sort of despedida. You won't know my family (or probably any Pinoy family) unless you see the amount of food we have in this kind of gathering. We had pancit luglog, lumpiang shanghai, lumpiang sariwa, Pinoy spaghetti (thus sweetish), tokwa't baboy - these are the ones cooked from scratch by my dear aunts. Bought food are the karyoka, pizza, ice cream and all the drinks. This is supposed to be snacks okay not dinner or supposed to be heavy.

Food Feast

Before all these I had a chance to have lunch at Dencio's restaurant in the atmospheric city of Tagaytay. Our table was in roofed but open-sided/open-air veranda that over looks Taal volcano. Lovely! The great food also completed our visit. I have here only a few of the ones that are memorable. The crispy pata was so-so hence not included. It didn't taste fresh enough or crispy enough for me. Although I forgot to take a picture of our appetiser, the excellent Crispy Kangkong, because I was too busy trying to dissect the dish and plotting on how to make it at home. There's a picture in the internet here if you're interested.

Pancit Canton
The pancit canton was good although a little more sauce would be nice.

Sizzling Bangus Belly
The sizzling bangus belly was nice, too. My mother was complaining about the amount of cholesterol in it but even she couldn't help to take a bite.

Pork Sisig
And the winner is --> pork sisig! This is the best tasting pork sisig I have had so far. Just plain pork sisig with the right tutong (crispy bits) at the bottom and no creamy dressing whatsoever. Yum-my!

If all that eating had us tired, all we had to do was turn on our side and gaze at the view of Taal Volcano right there on our table. *sigh* I wish I could come back soon.

Taal Volcano

I simply remember my favourite things and then I don’t feel so bad …

What can I say? I had a great two-week break back home in the Philippines. As expected I didn't fail to eat all my favourite things. Though sometimes with all my yakking with friends and relatives I forgot to take pictures of some. Fortunately here are a few that I made sure to make kodak of.

My first morning there saw me staring at a plastic bag of bualaw (binatog for the rest of the Phils.). This is one of my all time favourites that I continually reminded my mother to get me it before I flew in. The simplicity of the cooked, slightly sticky corn mixed with freshly grated coconut then simply enhanced by a sprinkling of salt makes me want to eat it all day. Give me more please!

Bualaw or Binatog

Next in line is the venerable karyoka. A snack or dessert (depending on how hungry you are) that is made of fried puffed glutinous rice balls drenched in some sweet sauce made from panucha (a type of muscovado sugar) and coconut milk. Like most of my favourite things - simple but yummy!

Karyoka

That karyoka was delivered via a family gathering held just before I left for the UK. A sort of despedida. You won't know my family (or probably any Pinoy family) unless you see the amount of food we have in this kind of gathering. We had pancit luglog, lumpiang shanghai, lumpiang sariwa, Pinoy spaghetti (thus sweetish), tokwa't baboy - these are the ones cooked from scratch by my dear aunts. Bought food are the karyoka, pizza, ice cream and all the drinks. This is supposed to be snacks okay not dinner or supposed to be heavy.

Food Feast

Before all these I had a chance to have lunch at Dencio's restaurant in the atmospheric city of Tagaytay. Our table was in roofed but open-sided/open-air veranda that over looks Taal volcano. Lovely! The great food also completed our visit. I have here only a few of the ones that are memorable. The crispy pata was so-so hence not included. It didn't taste fresh enough or crispy enough for me. Although I forgot to take a picture of our appetiser, the excellent Crispy Kangkong, because I was too busy trying to dissect the dish and plotting on how to make it at home. There's a picture in the internet here if you're interested.

Pancit Canton
The pancit canton was good although a little more sauce would be nice.

Sizzling Bangus Belly
The sizzling bangus belly was nice, too. My mother was complaining about the amount of cholesterol in it but even she couldn't help to take a bite.

Pork Sisig
And the winner is --> pork sisig! This is the best tasting pork sisig I have had so far. Just plain pork sisig with the right tutong (crispy bits) at the bottom and no creamy dressing whatsoever. Yum-my!

If all that eating had us tired, all we had to do was turn on our side and gaze at the view of Taal Volcano right there on our table. *sigh* I wish I could come back soon.

Taal Volcano

Smartmatic-TIM: Control of P7B triggered rift

From Malaya:

‘Mr. X’ wanted piece of the action

Final control by Smartmatic Corp., the foreign partner in the election computerization project of the Commission on Elections, of how the contracted P7.2 billion cost of the project will be spent is the reason Total Information Management, the Filipino partner, decided to dump the partnership.

TIM rejected the proposal of Smartmatic, saying this was contrary to the nature of a joint venture and “would expose it to possible violations of Philippine laws.”

TIM’s fear of exposure to “possible violation of Philippine laws,” sources familiar with the deal said, was prompted by the entry of a person with the highest political connections into the deal as a “carried” partner.”

A “carried partner,” the sources said, means one who wants to get a piece of the action without contributing a single centavo.

The fear of TIM president Jose Mari Antunez that he and his company might get entangled with the law was triggered when an associate saw the “powerful person” huddled with a Smartmatic principal and a member of a prominent business family from Cebu at the coffee shop of a Makati hotel last week, a source said.

Days later, Antunez got a call from the Cebu businessman warning that TIM should cooperate or else “offend very powerful people,” the source said.

Rep. Teodoro “Teddy Boy” Locsin Jr. (PDP-Laban), however, had a different take on the “irreconcilable differences” that sank the Smartmatic-TIM partnership.

He said Antunez demanded P500 million when he met with Smartmatic lawyers at a Makati hotel a few days ago.

“This caused Smartmatic to pull out,” he said. “The demand was ridiculous and the lawyers thought it was tantamount to extortion.”

Locsin, chair of the House committee on suffrage and electoral reforms, said Smartmatic had repeatedly bent over backwards to accommodate TIM as the 60 percent partner.

Locsin said TIM and Smartmatic could not agree on the exercise of “unilateral power” on when and how money would be spent, but did not elaborate.

An exchange of letters between Antunez and Armando Yanes, the highest Filipino official as chief financial officer of the Barbados-registered Smartmatic, provides a background for the rift.

In a letter dated June 25, Antunez said: “We are likewise ready, willing and able to form the JVC (joint venture corporation) with you under the express terms of our Joint Venture Agreement of April 23, 2009 and the discussion we had at our meeting last night. In this connection, we cannot agree that the Chairman be given authority to sign checks singly in case of issues or disagreements. This is contrary to the nature of a joint venture and would expose us to possible liabilities for violations of existing Philippine laws. We hope we have made our position clear on this matter.”

On the following day, Yanes wrote Antunez back, threatening to sue TIM for its alleged failure to comply with contractual obligations under the April 23 JVA.

In the letter, Yanes did not mention Antunez’ allegation that Smartmatic wanted “unilateral power” to spend. There was also no reference to alleged demand from Antunez for money.

‘Not giving up’

Despite the breakup of the TIM-Smartmatic joint venture, the Commission on Elections is not about to give up on automating the 2010 elections.

Commissioner Rene Sarmiento said the Comelec decided to adopt a pro-active stance to salvage the automated election by inviting representatives of Smartmatic and TIM to a dialogue yesterday for the two parties to thresh out their differences.

“They (Smartmatic and TIM) are given until July 3… So why not between today and July 3, make the most of it?” he said.

TIM legal counsel Boy de Borja confirmed their decision to pull out stemmed from differences with Smartmatic over decision-making.

He said the move was not a total surprise.

De Borja said they will not allow themselves to be “dominated” by their foreign partner.

Locsin said the Comelec should not be blamed for the fiasco since it fought for automation.

Locsin lambasted senators questioning the automation deal, particularly Francis Escudero who he said tried to block the deal by launching an investigation. He said this makes it appear that the senator “wants cheating to continue in 2010.”

“He’s a hypocrite,” Locsin said. “Please don’t add insult to injury by making it appear that you are unhappy that we’re going back to manual counting.”

Also a culprit

Justice Secretary Agnes Devanadera said Smartmatic will also be sued even if it was TIM that backed out of the contract.

“It’s got to be the entire consortium, because I’m sure the award (of the project) was given to the entire consortium, not just to the Filipino company. The backing out of the Filipino partner cannot be made as an excuse by the consortium,” she told reporters.

Devanadera declined comment on the suggestion of Comelec chairman Jose Melo that the poll body undertake the automation project with Smartmatic, similar to the Department of Foreign Affairs’ agreement with a foreign-owned company in the manufacture of machine-readable passports.

Sen. Richard Gordon will convene the Blue Ribbon Committee to investigate the withdrawal of TIM either Friday or Monday.

Gordon said the committee can hold a joint hearing with Escudero’s committee on constitutional amendments, which initiated an investigation into the awarding of the poll project to Smartmatic-TIM. – Gerard Naval, Wendell Vigilia, Jocelyn Montemayor, Evangeline de Vera and JP Lopez

Related Inquirer stories:

P500 M demand did it

TM- Smartmatic has too much power

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