Friday, April 10, 2026

Our Planned South American Cuisines Adventure

After our delightful journey through the vibrant and diverse cuisines of Southeast Asia, my daughter and I find ourselves, once again, standing at the edge of a new culinary map-this time, looking toward South America.

If Southeast Asia was a symphony of herbs, spices, and layered flavors, I imagine South America will be a bold, rhythmic dance, earthy, colorful, and deeply rooted in culture and history. The idea of continuing our father-daughter tasting tradition into this new region fills me with the same anticipation I felt when we first began sampling Filipino, Vietnamese, Thai, Laotian and Burmese dishes not too long ago.

There is something profoundly meaningful about sharing meals with family, especially when those meals are tied to exploration. At my stage in life, I have come to appreciate that food is never just food. It is memory, identity, migration, and sometimes even survival. Each dish tells a story of indigenous roots, colonial influences, and modern reinvention.

As we begin our South American culinary adventure, a few countries already sit high on our wish list.

Peruvian cuisine, for instance, has been gaining worldwide recognition and rightly so. I am particularly intrigued by ceviche, with its clean, citrus brightness, and lomo saltado, a stir-fry that reflects a fascinating blend of Chinese and Peruvian influences. It reminds me that cultures, like flavors, are never static.

Then there is Brazil, a country as vast as its culinary repertoire. I look forward to tasting feijoada, a hearty stew that is said to bring people together, much like the communal meals I remember from my childhood. And perhaps a bite of pão de queijo, those little cheese breads that seem to carry comfort in every bite.

Argentina, of course, calls to the meat lover. Their asado is not just a meal; it is a ritual. I can already imagine the slow, deliberate pace of grilling, the conversations that linger longer than the fire itself. Food, once again, as a vehicle for connection.

And how can we not explore Colombia, Chile, and Ecuador, each with its own distinct culinary identity? From arepas to empanadas, from seafood along the Pacific coast to dishes born high in the Andes, the diversity promises to be just as rich as what we experienced in Southeast Asia.

What excites me most, however, is not just the food, but the journey itself. There is a certain joy in not knowing exactly what to expect. There will be dishes we instantly love, others we may need to learn to appreciate, and perhaps a few that will leave us puzzled. But that is part of the adventure.

I must admit, there are days when writing daily blog posts feels like climbing a steep hill. The mind slows, inspiration hesitates. Yet, experiences like these shared with my daughter, one meal at a time have a way of reigniting that creative spark. And when I read comments from readers across the world who find joy in these simple stories, I am reminded why I continue.

So, to my readers, consider this an invitation. Come along with us as we explore South America, one dish, one country, one story at a time soon. I may not travel as far as I once did, but through these culinary journeys, the world continues to come to me.

And perhaps, in some small way, to you as well.

Meanwhile. here's the AI Overview: 

 

South American cuisine is a vibrant "melting pot" that blends ancient indigenous traditions with centuries of influence from Spanish, Portuguese, African, Italian, and even Asian immigrants. While each country has its own distinct culinary identity, the continent is united by staple ingredients like corn, potatoes (with over 4,000 varieties in the Andes), beans, and chili peppers.

Regional Culinary Styles
  • The Andes (Peru, Bolivia, Ecuador): Known for a "spicy" cuisine dictated by high altitudes. Staples include potatoes, quinoa, and unique meats like guinea pig (cuy) and llama.
  • The Southern Cone (Argentina, Uruguay, Chile): Heavily influenced by European (especially Italian and Spanish) immigration. This region is famous for its 
    Asado (barbecue)
     culture, high-quality beef, and Italian-style pastas and pizzas.
  • Tropical & Coastal (Brazil, Colombia, Venezuela): Features a strong African influence, particularly in Brazil's Bahia region. Common ingredients include coconut milk, palm oil (dendê), and tropical fruits.
Iconic Dishes You Should Know
DishCountry of OriginKey Ingredients
CevichePeruRaw fish cured in citrus juices (lime/lemon) with onions and chili.
FeijoadaBrazilA hearty black bean stew with various cuts of pork and beef.
ArepasVenezuela & ColombiaCircular cornmeal cakes that are grilled, baked, or fried and stuffed.
EmpanadasContinent-wideSavory pastry turnovers filled with meat, cheese, or vegetables.
Bandeja PaisaColombiaA massive platter of rice, beans, ground meat, fried egg, chorizo, and avocado.
Lomo SaltadoPeruA stir-fry of beef, onions, and tomatoes, showing Chinese influence.
Signature Ingredients & Drinks
  • Cassava (Yuca): An essential starchy root used for fries, flour, or as a side dish.
  • Chimichurri
    :
     A green sauce made of parsley, garlic, and vinegar, primarily used for grilled meats in Argentina and Uruguay.
  • Dulce de Leche
    :
     A sweet, caramelized milk confection used in desserts like alfajores.
  • Yerba Maté
    :
     A traditional, caffeine-rich herbal tea consumed from a gourd with a metal straw (bombilla).
  • Pisco Sour
    :
     A popular cocktail in Peru and Chile made from pisco (grape brandy) and citrus.
  • My Photo Of the Day- Some of My Favorite Filipino Dishes
  • Here are some of the most underrated Filipino dishes:
    Underrated Main Courses
    Kinilaw: a Filipino-style ceviche made with cubed fish or meat marinated in coconut or cane vinegar, often mixed with aromatics like chili, ginger, and onion.Arroz Caldo: a comforting rice porridge dish similar to congee, typically made with chicken, garlic, ginger, and onions, and often served with hard-boiled eggs and fried pork rinds.Ginataang Kuhol: a rich snail stew cooked in coconut milk with spices like ginger, garlic, and chili peppers.Dinuguan: a hearty stew made with pork meat and innards cooked in blood and vinegar, which can also be made with chicken or beef.
    Underrated Snacks and Appetizers
    Okoy: crispy shrimp fritters made with unpeeled shrimp, vegetables, and a pancake-like batter, often served with sweet and sour sauce or spicy vinegar dip.Lumpia: Filipino spring rolls that can be fresh or deep-fried, filled with minced meat, vegetables, and sometimes served with sweet and sour sauce or peanut sauce.Tamilok: a type of saltwater clam that's eaten raw or ceviche-style, often served with vinegar and other dipping sauces.
    Other Hidden Gems
    Balut: a boiled duck egg that's been fertilized and incubated for a few weeks, often served with vinegar, chili, or salt.Sisig: a popular dish made with chopped pork's head, seasoned with vinegar, salt, and pepper, and grilled with onions and chili peppers.Kare-Kare: a rich stew made with vegetables, meat, and peanut gravy, often served during festivities      
    Finally, Ditas and I had Empanadas from Limon, a Peruvian restaurant in downtown Walnut Creek, just recently. We ordered Chicken and Vegetarian ( mushrooms) Empanadas.   .Ditas and I had Empanadas from Limon, a Peruvian Restaurant in Downtown, Walnut Creek just recently.  


Thursday, April 9, 2026

One Liners on Aging, Part 1 of 3 - Pinoy Food Quotes

This is Part 1 of 3 on my Series on One Liners about Aging 


Aging Gracefully with a Punchline: Notes from Senior Living (Part 1)

If there is one thing I did not fully anticipate when I moved into a senior living community, it is this: humor is everywhere.

Not the loud, stage-performing kind. Not the kind that demands attention. But a quieter, more refined humor delivered in passing, often with impeccable timing, and almost always rooted in lived experience.

One Sunday morning, while waiting for brunch, one resident looked at the long line and said, “At our age, we should get priority seating and priority caffeine.”

No one laughed loudly. But everyone smiled. That is how humor works here.

In my earlier years, humor was often something you sought out through television, films, or the occasional comedian. Today, it seems to find me. It shows up unannounced, usually in the form of a one-liner, and leaves behind a small but lasting imprint.

Take, for example, this gem I heard during a recent conversation:

“I joined a fitness class for seniors. Now I just attend for the sitting portion.”

Or this one, offered during a discussion about memory:

“I have a great memory-short, but great.”

There is something deeply comforting about humor at this stage of life. It is not trying to impress. It is not trying to compete. It simply exists to lighten, to connect, to remind us that we are all navigating similar waters.

Living here these past few years, I have also come to realize that humor is a form of resilience. We joke about our aches and pains, our forgetfulness, our changing routines not to dismiss them, but to live alongside them with a bit more ease.

One gentleman I know, who walks daily with the assistance of a cane (a familiar companion of mine for several years), once remarked:

“This isn’t a cane-it’s a conversation starter.” And indeed, it is.

In a way, these one-liners are more than jokes. They are small declarations of independence. They say: we are still here, still observing, still finding ways to laugh at the absurdities of life.

I sometimes think that humor becomes more honest as we age. There is less pretense, less need for embellishment. A simple truth, slightly tilted, becomes a perfect joke.

As I continue this journey, both in life and in writing, I am reminded that reaching readers around the world, as this blog has now done with its two million page views, is built not only on stories of significance, but also on moments of lightness.

After all, a shared laugh can travel just as far as a serious reflection.

So I leave you, for now, with a few more lines from the unofficial “hallways anthology” of senior living:

“I don’t need an alarm clock. My body has its own early warning system.”

“I thought about joining a marathon… then I remembered I like sitting.”

“My daily exercise routine? I walk… to the refrigerator.”

“I’m not forgetful-I just give my brain a break.”

And my personal favorite from this week:

“At our age, we don’t need a bucket list, we need a ‘remember where I put the bucket’ list.”

There will be more of these, I am sure. Enough, perhaps, for a Part 2.

Until then, I remain a careful observer of life’s quieter jokes and a grateful participant in them.

THD Notes: 

If you pay your rent, via Door Loop be sure not to be late. I heard from a resident the other day, she was charged $7 more as penalty for being one-day late. Paying automatic is very convenient if you have some loss of memory. I sign for auto pay and so I am sure I will not be a victim of late penalty. I feel that the penalty for being late only one day is not fair. We should be given at least 2-3 days before penalties are added to our high rent.   

Observation on Furniture Arrangement at the Fireside Lounge: The other day, the couch divan and chairs were moved back to the Wall.  I like the arrangement, since you can see the fireplace clearly from outside and the room look more spacious.  Today the furniture is backed to its original arrangement, that is the couch and big chairs are in the center of the room just by the side of the Fireplace. 

Who is charge of Furniture Arrangement at our Fireside Lounge? Just Curious? 

Newton's Menu This Week: My Favorite is Linguine with Clams. I had it now for 2 days. The other day I commented to Joel that perhaps adding a couple more clams in the dish would be appreciated. So last night I had 9 clams in my dinner. There were only 6 clams in my linguine the first day I had the dish. Kudos to Joel and his Kitchen crew. I asked Joel, when will we have an Asian dish. He said pretty soon, Chinese Orange Chicken will be in our future menu. How about some Pinoy Food? 💚 

 Thank You Joel for listening to our needs and wishes. Keep up with Good Work. 

Finally, Quotes on Pinoy Food💚 and My Photo of the Day:   

  • "Filipino food is as rich and vibrant as its culture.".
  • "Nothing beats the Pinoy Food. It brought me back to my roots and somehow I got the chance to unwind my mind." — Steemit.
  • "From the first spoonful, the warmth of the rice porridge soaked into my bones. It was care in a bowl." — Goodreads.
  • "The Philippines isn't just a feast for the eyes—it's a feast for the stomach too.".
  • "It's got to have the calamansi lime juice in it to make everything else sing." — Goodreads.
  • "In the Philippines, food isn't just about eating—it's about bringing people together.".

         

A good meal is about than just food; it's about the people you share it with.

Sunday, April 5, 2026

Naides Restaurant- Happy Easter Sunday

A Glimpse of Naides - Filipino Fine Dining Reimagined

From Barrio to Bush Street: A Filipino-American Reflection on Naides

There are moments in life when food transcends the plate and becomes something else entirely, a memory, a story, a quiet affirmation of who we are.

Three weeks ago, I read about Restaurant Naides in the San Francisco Chronicle. I paused, not because of the $209 tasting menu or the polished Nob Hill setting, but because of something far more personal.

Filipino food has finally taken a seat at the fine dining table.

For many of us Filipino-Americans, our culinary memories are not plated with tweezers or served in multiple courses. They are loud, generous, and unapologetically communal. They live in kitchen tables crowded with adobosinigang, and rice that never seems to run out. They are carried in balikbayan boxes, passed down through generations, and rarely written down.

And yet, here comes Naides, quiet, elegant, and intentional, telling the same story in a different language.

lumpia that no longer looks like lumpia.
sinigang that arrives refined, almost poetic.
A humble puto dressed in flavors that travel from the Philippines to Northern California.

At first glance, one might ask: Is this still Filipino food?

I believe the answer is yes, perhaps more than ever.


Because what Naides is doing is not replacing tradition. It is honoring it. It is saying that the flavors we grew up with the sourness of tamarind, the funk of bagoong, the brightness of calamansi belong not only in home kitchens but also in the highest levels of culinary expression.

For someone like me, who has lived between two worlds, Filipino by heritage, American by circumstance, this feels deeply meaningful.

It reminds me of my own journey.

From the familiar comforts of Filipino cooking to the diverse culinary explorations I now share with my daughter from Vietnamese pho to Thai curries, and now, returning full circle to Filipino cuisine there is a quiet realization:



We are not just exploring food. We are rediscovering identity. Naides is not just a restaurant.

It is a milestone. It tells the world that Filipino cuisine is not “the next big thing.” It has always been here-complex, soulful, and deserving of recognition.

And perhaps, for many of us, it also tells something more intimate:

That the food of our childhood, once humble, sometimes overlooked is now being seen, celebrated, and elevated.

Not changed. Not lost. But finally understood.

Meanwhile, here's the AI Overview:

Dining at 
 in San Francisco is more than just a meal; for many in the Filipino-American community, it represents a profound moment of cultural recognition and "returning to roots" through a modern lens. Located in the former Sons & Daughters space, the restaurant-named in honor of Chef Patrick Gabon’s mother-elevates heritage flavors into a sophisticated fine-dining experience.
A Reflection on Heritage and Innovation
  • The "Elevated" Experience: Naides challenges the historical misconception that Filipino cuisine is only casual or "home-style" by presenting a 13-course tasting menu ($205) that utilizes rigorous European techniques.
  • Authenticity in Detail: For Filipino-Americans, the menu is a nostalgic journey. It features bold, unapologetic ingredients like bagoong (fermented shrimp paste) and sinigang (sour soup), which are often simplified in other settings but celebrated here for their complexity.
  • Representation Matters: Visitors often reflect on the pride of seeing Filipino artistry and "excellence" shine on a global stage, particularly as the restaurant has already garnered Michelin Guide recognition.
Signature Reimagined Dishes
The menu bridges the gap between traditional comfort and modern California ingredients:
  • Pandesal Brioche: A fluffy take on the classic Filipino bread, paired with a sisig-inspired chicken liver mousse or braised chicken gizzards.
  • Dry-Aged Duck Adobo: Served with soy jus and horseradish, transforming the quintessential Filipino stew into a refined protein course.
  • Creative Pairings: Partner Celine Wuu manages an intentional beverage program, including non-alcoholic pairings that use local and foraged ingredients to mimic traditional flavors.
  • Location708 Bush St, San Francisco, CA 94108
  • Vibe: Intimate, calm, and kitchen-focused-suitable for special occasions where the focus remains on the storytelling of each dish.
  • Reservations: Highly recommended, as tables often book out weeks in advance. You can check availability on platforms like Yelp. 

  • AI Overview of Easter Sunday:
    Easter Sunday 2026 falls on 
    April 5 for Western Christian denominations (Protestant and Catholic). Orthodox Easter (Greek and Russian Orthodox) will be celebrated one week later on April 12, 2026.
    Holy Week 2026 Timeline
    The week leading up to Easter includes several significant observances:
    • Palm Sunday: March 29
    • Holy Thursday: April 2
    • Good Friday: April 3
    • Holy Saturday: April 4
    • Easter Sunday: April 5
    Why the Date Changes
    Easter is a "moveable feast," meaning its date is not fixed on the solar calendar like Christmas. Instead, it is determined by the Paschal Full Moon—the first full moon occurring on or after the spring equinox (March 21). Western churches use the Gregorian calendar, while Orthodox churches use the Julian calendar, which often leads to different dates for the holiday.
    Easter Sunday 2026 falls on 
    April 5 for Western Christian denominations (Protestant and Catholic). Orthodox Easter (Greek and Russian Orthodox) will be celebrated one week later on April 12, 2026.
    Holy Week 2026 Timeline
    The week leading up to Easter includes several significant observances:
    • Palm Sunday: March 29
    • Holy Thursday: April 2
    • Good Friday: April 3
    • Holy Saturday: April 4
    • Easter Sunday: April 5
    Why the Date Changes
    Easter is a "moveable feast," meaning its date is not fixed on the solar calendar like Christmas. Instead, it is determined by the Paschal Full Moon—the first full moon occurring on or after the spring equinox (March 21). Western churches use the Gregorian calendar, while Orthodox churches use the Julian calendar, which often leads to different dates for the holiday.
    Christ is risen! With Him, hope is alive, and our hearts are filled with joy. Wishing everyone a blessed Easter
  • Lastly, here's our special THD Easter Sunday Brunch- featuring prime rib and Baked ham plus the standard weekly brunch offerings of Newton's Restaurant  


  • Personal Note: After the brunch, I will be at my oldest son residence in Benicia, playing Chinese Mahjong along with his wife Ruth and Youngest daughter Ditas. 
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