Eats more fun in Baguio!

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Nothing is better for that big vat of coffee than a natural cold to drink it with. But coffee (or hot chocolate, for that matter) isn’t the only edible thing best consumed in the Baguio cold. Here are some of the best places you can retire at at the end of a long walk around the city (which I’m sure you’re going to have to do, especially come Panagbenga weekend).

1. Hill Station
Average price per dish: P300
Location: Below SM City Baguio

4 Clockwise from top: Death by Chocolate Cake (their best-selling dessert), Crispy Duck Flakes, and Steak and Prawns Peri-Peri. Photos by Owen Ballesteros

Though on the steep side, Hill Station remains one of Baguio’s best restaurants. It’s warm and cozy and the food gives you that fuzzy feeling you will remember Baguio by. It’s also a great place to impress a date (large French windows, wooden panels, and a grand staircase–the works).

But Hill Station is just a fourth of what this spot is all about, the remaining three being Casa Vallejo’s hotel, North Haven Spa, and Mt. Cloud Bookshop. They’re housed inside Casa Vallejo, the more-than-a-century-old former hotel that was literally leaning on one side until 2010 when it was restored.

Literally steps away from one another, these four spots are guaranteed sources of pure Baguio bliss. You can literally wake up from slumber, eat steak, have a full body strawberry scrub, and then read a book right after with your cup of coffee on hand. To say it’s convenient almost sounds blasphemous more than an underestimation. The idea almost seems too damn good to be true, but hey, it is.

[See also: Back to the old American Hill Station]

2. Cafe by the Ruins
Average price per dish: P200
Location: Below the Baguio City Hall, beside Eurotel Baguio

This is perhaps the only restaurant in Baguio that serves Coffee Alamid–yeah, civet cat dung. I haven’t gotten around to forking out P300 for a cup though. For those who can’t deal with that prospect yet, Cafe by the Ruins serves up hearty meals that have beguiled countless people all these years. Usually doubling as an art gallery for local artists, Cafe by the Ruins’ decor is almost never permanent, and that’s one good reason to keep coming back.

3. PNKY Cafe
Average price per dish: P200
Location: On the way to Teacher’s Camp; just across the so-called Baguio Haunted House (the white one).

5One word for PNKY: fascinating. Every person who has made it his or her life’s work to travel will feel right at home at PNKY with its lomo-littered counter, souvenirs of the owners’ travels around the world. If you find the wooden Diana mock-up table napkin on your table interesting enough, you can buy it (just please don’t nick it). Everything there–furniture included–is for sale (though I think not the suitcase, as shown in photo above).

Food options have globe-trotting leanings: Lake Como Catch, Beef a la Seine, Roman Holiday, Vaticani, Le Louvre, Chicken Spinach Riviera, Under the Tuscan Sun, Ciao Bela Carbonara, Anne Frank Omelette, and Leaning Tower of Pancakes, among others.

PNKY also has a Bed and Breakfast.

4. Villa Cordillera
Average price per dish: P150
Location: Outlook Drive

6 Clockwise from top: quarter-pound cheeseburger, Lechon Kawali, and Pinakbet with Bagnet. Photos by Owen Ballesteros

You can’t dine at the Baguio Country Club if you’re not a member, but you can taste their superb coffee (yes, the exact same thing, at P35 with refill) and their even more famed raisin bread (the.exact.same.raisin-pockmarked.bread) at Villa Cordillera, a bed and breakfast and restaurant operated by the BCC Corporation. The catch: food here is affordable, and typical servings are more than enough for two persons (as usually happens to us). Since barely anyone dines here (it’s a bit far off, but nowhere a cab cannot reach), you’ll have the peace and quiet all to yourself (plus the rather great view of the golf course and pines at the balcony, so you better go al fresco).

5. Solibao
Average price per dish: P150
Location: Along Session Road (along the lane of Starbucks); Burnham Park (near Melvin Jones Grandstand)

Baguio spoils me with Christmas weather all year long, and Solibao spoils me even more with piping hot, delectable, sweet, melt-in-your-mouth puto bumbong any time of the day, any day of the week. For P45, you get a generous serving of this purple goodness, with enough coconut, butter, and muscovado sugar to fuse together for that heartwarming taste you can only associate with Christmas morning.

Solibao’s Kare-Kareng Bagnet is another guilty pleasure. Their Session Road branch cooks it perfectly every time, though its lack of open-air windows tends to keep the place too warm to be comfortable. Their Burnham Park branch, on the other hand, has a superb al fresco option which never fails to polish off even the simplest of meals (though I have yet to try the Kare-Kareng Bagnet on this particular branch).

6. Volante
Average price per dish: P150
Location: Along Session Road (along the lane of KFC and Pizza Hut)

7Photos by Owen Ballesteros

Order anything in Volante and you’re sure to love it. You’ll love it even more because it’s so affordable you can practically order the whole menu if you’re hungry enough. On a personal note, Volante conjures up memories of countless satisfactory breakfasts, lunches, and dinners–even those taken at the ungodly hour of 2 AM, right after hopping off a bus from Manila (yeah, it’s open 24 hours).

We’ve dined with friends and family here more than any other restaurant, and bumped into friends we haven’t seen in a while right in this place, simply because everyone considers it the same way: like a home we come back to over and over again.

I particularly love their four-cheese pizza. Actually, I can eat any pizza on their menu–and it’s all because of the crust. It’s soft and gummy and served fresh from the oven, and you can have your very own six-inch serving for under P100 (I’m not kidding).

For breakfast, I highly recommend their Waffles + Omelet, a super heavy combination (2 big waffles + an omelet with your choice of filling) for P112. Their coffee is the cheapest yet of the good coffees I’ve had at P28 (with refill!), while their P28 lemongrass tea is just as satisfactory. Pair that up with their salad with shrimp and blue cheese–not only are you doing your body a great favor by avoiding the fat and oil; you’re also going to feel so full you’d forget you ate just leaves.

UPDATE: January 27, 2013: Pizza Volante has another branch at Wright Park, beside the Ketchup Food Community, and another one at Camp John Hay’s Technohub.

7. Gecko
Average price per dish: P200
Location: Session Road, along the lane of KFC and Pizza Hut
UPDATE (Sept. 21, 2012): As of this writing, the Flying Gecko has unfortunately closed down.

3 Clockwise from top: Strawberry & Peach Melba, Good Ole Burger, and Wheatgrass tea

The Flying Gecko looks like a cross between a pub and a coffee shop, but all’s good in a place that knows its burgers well. The Good Ole Burger, their signature dish at P300, is a quarter of a pound of juicy meat sandwiched between an unnumbered layer of cheese and greens. Their assorted tapas are great with beer as well. Neutralize all the burger fat with their Wheatgrass tea and you’re ready to cap off your meal with sweet Strawberry and Peach Melba. And it’s open 24 hours too.

8. Tea House
Average price per dish: P100
Location: Session Road, along the lane of Starbucks (look for the big black and white photo of a baby plastered on a window and you’re there. You’re not going to miss it.)

85aaa5f2264711e1a87612313804ec91_7 The thing that delights Chona most probably will delight you too.

Two words: Chona’s Delight. Make that with an exclamation point: Chona’s Delight!

Tea House’s Chona’s Delight looks like milk, cream, chocolate, and pudding mixed in gleeful abandon with sugar and poured on microwavable containers, with the smallest effort at presentation from the five loosely circular white shapes on top, which I can only assume were meant to be flowers. But Chona’s Delight is sweet, frozen, creamy heaven–something you’d think only your mother will be kind enough to whip up for you. For P110, you take home a piece of that cold goodness with you. I get giddy everytime I buy one. Until now.

9. Vizco’s
Average price per dish: P150
Location: Session Road, along the lane of Starbucks

Not far off from Tea House is the home of the strawberry shortcake–a round assembly of white and scarlet, the latter courtesy of strawberries sitting on top of the heap, filling every space possible. Nobody does this shortcake better than Vizco’s, and since you’re in Baguio, never leave without the most delectable strawberries in town.

10. Rumours
Average price per dish: P150
Location: Session Road, along the lane of Starbucks

DSC_5849Photo by Owen Ballesteros

Rumours is a pub with a gelato. You can’t have better beer elsewhere, because only Rumours gives you that rather cramped space that lets you sit practically shoulder to shoulder with the person on the next table.The pub is of course abuzz at night, though you can still have your gelato fix at noon in the deserted dining area.

Others you may want to try out:

O My Gulay
Serves vegetarian fare, but the really mind-blowing thing about this place is its interiors. Just see for yourself. If Georgina Wilson was impressed, maybe you will too. It’s on top of La Azotea building along Session Road, on the same lane as Pizza Hut and KFC.

Forest House
Dining at Forest House means eating their specialty, the distinctly Pinoy dish Crispy Bagnet, inside a profusely decorated log cabin. They might have had a fireplace somewhere to complete the look, though I can’t be too sure about it. Forest House also has a Bed and Breakfast just below (read this if you wanna know more). It is located along Loakan Road, walking distance from the Panagbenga Park and Nevada Square, one of two Baguio nightlife spots (aside from Legarda St.).

2Photos by Owen Ballesteros

Choco-late de Batirol
The best start to a cold morning is, aside from coffee, a steaming vat of rich, nutty hot chocolate straight from the jar (you can choose from their original blend or those infused with cinnamon, strawberry, etc). And while you’re at it, you may try their Vigan longganiza as well. It’s located inside Camp John Hay, just after the entrance gate nearest the Baguio Country Club.

1Photos by Owen Ballesteros

[See also: Baguio brew and Panagbenga 2012 Guide]

Just how cheap can cheap get? Some of the best airline bargains from Pinoy travelers!

We grew up thinking that flying is only for the moneyed members of the population, but that’s not the case anymore. There’s a new world order in place and it’s called SEAT SALES.

If the idea of stripping yourself off of cash (or your savings, for that matter) for a trip does not excite you as much, or worse, has since been preventing you from traveling, then perhaps you can take a leaf from these people’s books and see just how CHEAP cheap can get.

photo
Thank you, Owen Ballesteros, for this artsy fartsy work.
 

TIP: To be successful, you’re gonna need an incredible amount of patience, an equal if not higher amount of luck, and maybe an internet connection that’s faster than your heartbeat when you read the words PISO SALE from your computer monitor.

So here are the cheapest seats some travel bloggers have scored so far. If they can do it, SO CAN YOU. Fares indicated here already include those effin’ taxes.

To all the generous people of Pinoy Travel Bloggers, thank you for sharing! More cheap fares to everyone!

Erick Dantoc of Road Worthy Man
P3817.20 Manila-Batanes-Manila

George Govan of Where the Travels
P1750 Clark-Singapore-Clark

Reiza Dejito of Wander If You Must
$25 (around P1075) Clark-Macau-Clark

Nathalie Penados of My Wandering Soles
P522 Manila-Jakarta-Manila

Alex Dizon of Rammmpa!
P423 Manila-Cebu-Manila

Renz Bulseco of The Traveling Nomad
P440 Davao-Manila-Davao
P356 Davao-Iloilo-Davao

Joanna Jane Liwag of The Backpack Chronicles
P280 Manila-Marinduque-Manila

Jerome Baluyut of Balintataw.org
P267 Manila-Singapore-Manila

Valerie Alla Teves of The Weekend Haven
P257 Manila-Jakarta-Manila

Ron Cruz of FlipTravels
P250 Manila-Singapore-Manila

Izah Morales of Tripadora
P155 Manila-Naga-Manila

Mervin of PinoyAdventurista.com
P155 Manila-Ozamiz-Manila
P155 Manila-Butuan-Manila
P155 Manila-Pagadian-Manila
P155 Manila-Naga-Manila

Andros ‘Andie’ Novido of The Viewing Deck
P151 Manila-Ozamiz-Manila
P151 Manila-Zamboanga-Manila
P151 Manila-Tacloban-Manila
P151 Manila-Caticlan-Manila
P991 Manila-HongKong-Manila
P175 Manila-Cagayan de Oro-Manila
P155 Manila-Caticlan-Manila
P970 Manila-Hong Kong-Manila

Elal Jane Lasola of The Shades of Grey
P150 Manila-Dumaguete-Manila

Che Gurrobat of Backpacking Pilipinas
P150 Manila-Bacolod-Manila

Sinjin Pineda of Libotero
P114 Cebu-Davao-Cebu
P114 Cebu-General Santos-Cebu
P114 Cebu-Ozamiz-Cebu
P114 Cebu-Clark-Cebu
P114 Cebu-Bacolod-Cebu
P114 Cebu-Iloilo-Cebu

Marie Villadolid of Happy Travels
P110 Manila-Bacolod
P2999 Manila-HongKong

Aleah of The Solitary Wanderer
P100 Manila-Butuan-Manila
P800 Manila-Kuala Lumpur-Manila

Loraine Gallevo of Adventure Accounting
P97.20 Manila-San Jose-Manila

Mich Borlongan of Chasing Philippines
P96 Manila-Puerto Princesa

Kimkawayan Lim of Indie Escape
P53 Manila-Cebu-Manila

Catherine Iblan of Seeking Felicity
P60 Manila-Caticlan

Christine Fernandez of Jovial Wanderer
P56.02 Manila-Tacloban-Manila

Lloyd Lostboy of The Lost Boy Lloyd
P56 Manila-Cebu
P56 Manila-Bacolod
P56 Manila-Zamboanga
P56 Manila-Butuan
P56 Manila-Davao
P56 Manila-Cagayan

Kat Torres of Excursionista.net
P51 Manila to Saigon

Nina Fuentes of JustWandering.org
P36 Manila-Saigon

RV Escatron of Looney Planet
P0 Singapore-Bali
P0 Cebu-HongKong-Cebu
P2,000 Manila-Batanes-Manila

Melody Co of Girl Kuripot
P0 Clark-Kuala Lumpur-Japan-Kuala Lumpur-Bangkok

Daene Luna of Filipina on Flip Flops
P0 Manila-Dumaguete-Manila

Bino Caiña of Frameless World
P0 Bali-Singapore

The zero fares you saw above are not typographical errors–some got complimentary tickets because of delayed flights, others were just too lucky to have chanced upon ZERO seat sales (yes, there’s something even better than the piso sales :P ). As for me, I snagged a P96 Manila-Caticlan seat once upon a time.

So lemme ask you, why are you not traveling yet?


Featured: We Are Sole Sisters’ 20 Photos to Inspire Location Independence

Location independence is one thing every aspiring traveler wants, and more importantly for me, works for.

Thank you to Lois of We Are Sole Sisters, whose Location Independence post reminded me once again of why I am where I am today, having made the decisions I made, and still loving every moment of it.

24615_1327689945941_1041712310_30909102_693741_nOnce upon a stolen summer in Pagudpud, Ilocos Norte

Thumbnail photo from http://travelforumglobe.com/MGalleryItem.php?id=1121.

Heading to Panagbenga? Read this!

February is the month of blooms in the Philippines’ summer capital, Baguio City. It’s the perfect excuse for that weekend hike to Baguio for an early summer treat, although you would have to brace yourself for big crowds–and I mean BIG–especially during Panagbenga weekend.

events Photo grabbed from www.panagbenga.ph

Activities to watch out for are the Panagbenga Grand Street Parade on the 25th and the Float Parade on the 26th–Baguio’s answer to Pasadena’s Rose Parade. Both of these events start in the morning and end just before noon.

As in the past, tourists come to Baguio in droves, often more than the city could comfortably accommodate. So here are some tips to survive the Panagbenga weekend (and when I mean ‘survive’, I mean it literally):

1. Find your spot early.

In Baguio City, where space is so limited that even the tops of waiting sheds are used as viewing areas, you’d have to exert more effort at securing your area. And when you finally do, stick to it. Moving around is literally impossible once people fill up behind you. Between 6 AM and 7 AM is the ideal time to be there, and any later than that you’d be surprised at how thick the crowds already are.

Panagbenga 2009: Full to the brim Spell crowds.

DSC_5517And here’s another one. Photo by Owen Ballesteros

2. Head to Harrison Road if you want a little bit more space than what Session Road could give.

Or for those who want to finish the parade rather early, troop to the performers’ starting area–usually near Victory Liner at PNR Road stretching all the way to South Drive. There are even less people here and you can more freely move around.

DSC_4642Photo by Owen Ballesteros

3. Prepare to walk.

–that is, prepare to walk long, uphill, and downhill to almost all your destinations as either the road you’re trying to pass through is closed or there’s just too many people that taxis are almost always full. Weather in Baguio is still more conducive for walking than any other part of the country so it’s bound to be not as traumatic as walking the same distance elsewhere.

DSC_5298So bring bottled water like any smart kid. Photo by Owen Ballesteros

4. Secure your belongings. Pickpockets will be having a field day.

DSC_5624Be extra watchful of your valuables. Photo by Owen Ballesteros

5. Have your photos taken with the floats at the Athletic Bowl (near Burnham Park).

They are usually displayed the afternoon following the parade.

DSC_5741 Like a pro! :P

Now, what to do after?

DSC_5519Photo by Owen Ballesteros

Let the crowds subside before going around the city center. Burnham Park will be full to bursting with tourists immediately after the parade, and the big mall on top of the hill is impossible to navigate at this time. For lunch, head to places quite a distance from the city center. My picks would be Villa Cordillera along Outlook Drive, Cafe by the Ruins near the City Hall, Choco-late de Batirol at Camp John Hay (as well as any of the restaurants inside, including the Filling Station, TechnoHub, and commissary), Hill Station (it’s below SM but this is one of Baguio’s best so you really have to try it), Forest House (South Drive), and PNKY (on the way to Teacher’s Camp).

You can also try picking strawberries in La Trinidad, but this can set you back by P500 per kilo, according to one of the farm tenants we talked to recently, who told us prices are bound to go up by the end of February (current rate is P300 per kilo, although you can buy as low as P120 per kilo from vendors in front of the farms). A better deal is this: buy strawberry ice cream from one of the many vendors just outside the farms. They’re made from real strawberries and are hot pink, not the usual pale pink dirty ice cream. You can buy a small cup for P15 and a sugar cone for P20–and you can’t find this in the city proper. =)

DSC_1547 Tada! Photo by Owen Ballesteros

DSC_2268 Photo by Owen Ballesteros

DSC_2251 Photo by Owen Ballesteros

Wanna head to Baguio this February? There’s Victory Liner and Genesis coming from Cubao and Pasay (fare is around P450 for a 7-hour ride. Deluxe trips take about half as fast and cost almost twice as much). If you’re looking for accommodations near the parade route and city center, head to Legarda Road, Baguio’s hotel strip. There are also hotels below SM Baguio that are a walking distance from the parade route.

Should you want to secure a photographer’s pass, visit www.panagbenga.ph.

Click on this link for Panagbenga 2011 photos.

Thumbnail photo by Owen Ballesteros

All the way to Cebu’s Tops on two wheels

I was suprised and terrified to find out there was no other way we could reach Cebu’s Tops than by hitching on a motorcycle.

See, the last time I rode a motorcycle was years ago, with my brother as the driver, in a very long two-minute ride which made my longest five minutes in Davao look like a walk in the park.

Not having learned to balance myself in anything with two wheels until last week—another story altogether—I did not find motorcycles the best means of transportation. It does not help either that these vehicles enjoy a notoriety for being the choice of paid murderers.

Thankfully, our driver for that day—one of many awaiting potential passengers at Cebu’s JY Square in Lahug—looked nothing like a murderer. And since we were a pair of small people on backpacks, we did not find it difficult to squeeze ourselves on the motorcycle either.

So on we went, away from the town and into slopes. We passed by what looked familiarly like the way up to Baguio, which I’ve been seeing the last four years on an almost weekly basis. But being a wrong swerve away from death—or on a more positive note, being more ‘in touch’ with the road and the air (too cold!)—had felt completely different. For one, I could never sleep on the way, or read, or take a picture as I was too scared to let my camera out. I was, however, able to tweet. Ah, priorities.

DSC_7887 Our driver, Mang Junior, treaded curves and slopes pretty well, not knowing it was his companions’ first time to ever ride this kind of vehicle together.

Until a few days after that—which I’m reserving for another post—this has been the longest leisurely motorcycle ride I took. And I had in fact enjoyed it, forgetting until the last few minutes of the uphill ride that we were on a motorcycle and I could simply die a brutal death by falling on a cliff.

DSC_7895 ‘Course we did.

I’m glad we visited during the day, though, as it can be a totally different matter when you do the roundtrip at night—supposedly the best time to go to Tops, which lets you see the whole of Cebu bathed in light. I’m glad Baguio continues to spoil me with similar everyday sights, otherwise I would have simply regretted not visiting at nightfall.

Tops, we soon saw, was no more than a viewdeck with ample space for vanity souvenir shots, group or otherwise.

DSC_7900 Surviving half of an uphill motorcycle ride and living to tell the tale. Photo taken by Owen Ballesteros.

DSC_7918
DSC_7913 Owen and I and the photogenic ground.

DSC_7929 Here goes the only other thing you can do there (aside from eat and take photos): ring a bell. According to the directions, you ring the bell once for ‘firm partnership,’ twice for ‘lasting friendship,’ and thrice for ‘never-ending love.’ You’re also supposed to hold hands with your friends and/or partner when doing this… (or maybe I should just shut up). Photo by Owen Ballesteros

DSC_7931Cebu City and Mactan Island as seen from Tops during our visit. It was hazy, so I converted this photo to black and white. Photo taken by Owen Ballesteros.

DSC_5845View from the Tops at night, taken by Owen Ballesteros when he visited Cebu last year.

Tables and chairs are also available on its tunnel-like main building, though the food available makes bus station food outlets look like fine dining restaurants—chips, soda, and beer, definitely not enough to last you long in this place (unless you bring some). Considering it doesn’t offer anything else, and doesn’t even give you good food to stay long, I did not find it worth the P100 entrance fee per person.

DSC_5840 On the right side of this rather ingeniously designed area are tables and chairs. Great if you’re coming with a big group, otherwise you can’t sleep there. Photo taken by Owen Ballesteros during an earlier visit to Cebu.

If I did not find the motorcycle ride enjoyable for its sheer novelty, I would not recommend this to others looking for a unique Cebu experience. We spotted at least two zipline spots on the way, though, and figured that was the better way to experience the place’s elevation, its main selling point. Imagine ziplining overlooking the whole of Cebu. Then again, that’s just me thinking out loud.

Expenses: P600 for 2 people
P75 per person per way for the motorcycle ride (P300)
P100 for every hour the driver waits for you (P100)
P100 per person entrance fee to Tops (P200)

Worth it? I’d say I’ll just charge it to experience.

*To get there, ride the 04H jeepney (or others just as long as they’re passing by JY Square). This is a mall where men on motorcycles wait for passengers going to Tops. If you look touristy enough, you won’t even have to ask around; they will find you. :) Aside from private vehicles, only motorcycles go all the way up (no jeepneys). We passed by at least two restaurants on the way up so you might want to drop by there for lunch or dinner, or you can always wait for my next post on where we ate for lunch that day.

~

This entry is part of my 12 Days in the Visayas series.

12daysvisayas