Recipes Restaurant

Recipes by Cafe Metro is a restaurant chain mainly serving Filipino favorites. Recipes, which prevously went by the name Cafe Metro, was founded by Miguel and Ria de Guzman in the early 2000s. Among its most popular offerings are its General's Chicken and Crispy Tilapia.

Recipes Branches

  • Recipes Greenbelt 3 2nd Level – 728-0920
  • Recipes Trinoma 2nd Level – 901-3686
  • Recipes Alabang Town Center 2nd Level Corte de Las Palmas – 772-2216
  • Recipes Midtown Robinsons Place Manila 2nd Level – 567-1912
  • Recipes Shangri-La Plaza Mall 5th Level – 637-4050
  • Recipes Newport Mall 4th Level – 822-1547
  • Recipes Soledad 2 Nuvali – (049) 302-0032

Recipes Menu    as of July 2012

North Park

North Park is a restaurant serving Chinese food. North Park's Chinese food falls somewhere between authentic and North American Chinese fastfood. There are better places for dimsum, noodle soups, and congee and most of their main dishes are unremarkable, but they are good with most of their fried battered offerings. Few local places seem to know how to cook squid but North Park is one that does. In previous years I would have said that North Park is a great value but with their price increases I can no longer do so since even with their quick eatery vibe they are now priced in line with other fancier restaurants. If they are still less expensive in comparison it is because they do not have a mandatory service charge. Orders for delivery can be placed at 73737 for select areas within Metro Manila.


North Park Branches

  • North Park Alabang Town Center
  • North Park Araneta Coliseum
  • North Park Banawe
  • North Park Cablubang
  • North Park Convergys
  • North Park Edsa Central (Greenfield)
  • North Park Glorietta 5
  • North Park Greenhills (P. Guevarra)
  • North Park Leviste
  • North Park Macapagal
  • North Park Makati Avenue
  • North Park Manila Ocean Park
  • North Park Market! Market!
  • North Park MarQuee Mall
  • North Park Medical City
  • North Park SM Bicutan
  • North Park SM Muntinlupa
  • North Park South Supermarket Filinvest
  • North Park South Supermarket Valenzuela
  • North Park Santa Rosa
  • North Park Trinoma

North Park Menu    as of August 2012

Chic-Boy

Chic-Boy is a quick service dine-in, take-out, and delivery restaurant that specializes in grilled chicken and pork lechon. Similar to Mang Inasal, it offers all-you-can-eat rice with its meals. It is a subsidiary of Pier One Bar & Grill Holdings Corporation and is open to franchise applications.

Chic-Boy Menu    as of May 2012

Gerry's Grill

Gerry's Grill is a chain of grill restaurants serving Filipino cuisine. It's an exemplar of the wave of Filipino grill restaurants akin to tavern restaurants that opened in the late 90s and early 2000s catering mainly to adults with a menu of grilled Filipino appetizers (pulutan) and Filipino dishes along with beer and other alcoholic beverages.

Gerry's Grill in comparison to other Filipino grilling restaurants seems to have its act together better. It is generally cleaner with more organized and punctual service than its competitors. I cannot say I've had an unforgivable experience at Gerry's Grill unlike with other places. Still there's not really anything that makes it stand out. The food is good in spots, not so good in others, and the portion size could be more geenrous. It's a restaurant to have a good time with the gang and not be distracted by such trivialities as how good or bad the place is.

Gerry's Grill Menu    as of June 2012

Appetizers
Baked Scallops 245
Crunchy Squidheads 165
Lumpiang Shanghai 165
Garlic Adobo Shreds 205
Dinakdak 215
Chili Cheese Sticks 165
Tahong Ala Pobre 165
Coco Fish Fingers 175
Shrimp & Chips 305
Ginataang Kuhol 175
Chichabits 215
Green Mango w/ Bagoong 115
Green Mango Salad 135
Tuna Sashimi 205
Spicy Sashimi 225
Oriental Tuna Sashimi 215
Sizzling Tokwa Con Carne 175
Sizzling Balut with Tofu 185
Calamares 175
Chicken Skin 115
Chicken Lollipop 175
Tokwa't Baboy 165
Peanuts 85
Vegetables
Sizzling Kangkong 145
Bulanglang 175
Pinakbet 165
Kilawin Puso ng Saging 165
Chopsuey 185
Tinomok 175
Laing with Tinapa 165
Soups
Sinigang na Salmon Belly sa Miso 235
Nilagang Bulalo 295
Sinigang na Bangus Belly 225
Sinigang na Hipon 255
Sinigang na Baboy 235
Nido Soup 65
Molo 175
Kinilaw
Kilawin Pusit 195
Tanigue Kilaw 195
Sisig Kilaw 185
Tuna Kilaw 205
Sugba Kilaw 265
Char-Grilled
Sword Fish Steak 355
Sword Fish Belly 365
Sword Fish Ribs 255
Inihaw na Pusit 328
Inihaw na Pla Pla 215
Inihaw na Tuna Belly 265
Inihaw na Baby Pusit 285
Inihaw na Giant Pusit 145
Pinaputok na Cream Dory 275
Chicken Kebab 195
Inihaw na Manok 228
Bangus 245
Inihaw na Liempo 175
Pork Spareribs 235
Pork Barbecue (2 sticks) 135
Chicken
Gerry's Fried Chicken 228
Spicy Garlic Chicken 228
Sizzling Garlic Mushroom Chicken 245
Pork
Sizzling Sisig 189
Lechom Kawali 235
Crispy Pata Regular: 445 Large: 575
Sizzling Binagoongang Baboy 185
Tinomok 175
Adobo Pork Ribs 255
Beef
Garlic Adobo Beef Ribs 255
Beef Kare Kare 295
Crispy Tadyang 275
Beef Kaldereta 235
Bef Casserole 265
Sizzling Beef Spareribs 285
Seafood
Sizzling Gambas 235
Sizzling Tilapia Ala Pobre 255
Sizzling Bangus Ala Pobre 255
Sizzling Pusit Ala Pobre 325
Sizzling Sword Fish 365
Sizzling Bangus Sisig 195
Sizzling Tuna Sisig 185
Crispy Pla Pla w/ Garlic 215
Rice
Plain Rice 32
Garlic Rice 38
Crab Rice 195
Bagoong Rice 135
Veggie Rice 155
Adobong Puso Rice 175
Seafood Rice 185
Tinapa Rice 155
Merienda
Lomi 135
Batchoy 125
Gerry's Clubhouse Sandwich (Good for 2) 195
Pancit Palabok 175
Pancit Canton 165
Crispy Pancit Canton 165
Pancit Bihon 155
Spaghetti 155
Kiddie Meals
Spaghetti with Fried Chicken 145
Spaghetti with Pork BBQ 145
Spaghetti with Lumpiang Shanghai 135
Dessert
Vanilla Leche Flan 75
Sansrival 115
Brownie Ala Mode 125
Ginataang Halo Halo 75
Buko Pandan 78
Leche Flan 48
Mais Con Hielo 95
Ice Cream 48
Ice Cream Sundae 65
Halo-Halo 105
Crispy Halo-Halo 185
Double Trio 145

Abe

Abe is a Filipino restaurant part of the LJC chain of restaurants founded by the late Larry J. Cruz and dedicated to his father Emilio Aguilar Cruz who was nicknamed Abe (ah-beh) a Kapampangan word for friend.

Abe Menu    as of May 2012

Kare-Kare

Kare-Kare is a stew of meat and vegetables in a peanut-based sauce. Traditionally the meat used is beef, tripe, and oxtail although versions using seafood have become popular relatively recently. Annatto seeds (atsuete) are often used to color the sauce. The dish is often served with shrimp paste (bagoong) the saltiness of which gives sharp contrast to the peanut sauce. There are various theories as to the origins of the stew or whether or not it is closely related to curry, but there is speculation of some Indian influence whether due to trade routes or settlement during the time of the British Occupation of Manila during the Seven Years' War in the 18th century.

Puchero

Puchero (also pochero in the Philippines) is a Spanish influenced stew of meat and vegetables often with sausages and chickpeas (garbanzo beans) that is popular in many Hispanic countries. In Spanish, puchero can refer to a stewpot from whence the name of the dish is probably derived. Puchero is likely modelled after the Spanish cocido madrileño but has been adapted to the various places and regions in which it is served.

In the Philippines, puchero is usually made with beef, cabbages, and saba bananas and served with rice as a main course unlike in Spain where frequently the broth is drained and served as a soup as a first course, possibly with the addition of pasta, with the meat and vegetables to follow as a second course.

Simplified Filipino versions of puchero sometimes eschew the sausages and chickpeas altogether and can appear very similar to nilagang baka with the addition of sweeter ingredients like saba bananas or tomato sauce being the sole point of difference.

Pancit Palabok

Pancit palabok is a popular noodle dish in the Philippines. Its orange-yellow sauce is very similar to that of pancit Malabon in its use of shrimp, pork, chicharon bits, chopped green onion, and annatto water; but it is simpler, generally without the addition of more seafood such as mussels, oysters, and smoked fish flakes, and the substitution of duck eggs for chicken eggs seen in pancit Malabon although precise details may vary from recipe to recipe. Pancit palabok also uses thinner bihon noodles than that used in pancit Malabon.

Pancit luglog, or pancit luglug, according to some authorities is an interchangeable term for pancit palabok although others say there is a difference because a proper pancit luglog uses thicker noodles. It is thought to have originated from Pampanga. The term niluluglog describes the up and down motion of submerging and taking out the noodles from boiling water used in its cooking.

Calamansi is often provided so that its juice can be squirted on by the diner if an added dash of acidity is desired. It's recommended that this only be done if one expects to finish eating the noodles in the same sitting since the added acidity breaks down proteins and accelerates the rate of spoilage. Even in the best of circumstances noodle dishes do not keep very well and should be consumed soon after being cooked.

List of Philippine Vegetables

Names of vegetables in the Philippines in English and Tagalog. The glossary also includes common herbs and legumes in the Philippines and some Chinese and scientific names to help in the translation of Filipino food terms.
  • Abitsuwelas / Bitsuelas – Baguio bean, green bean, snap bean, string bean
  • Alibangbang – Malabar bauhinia (Bauhinia malabarica)
  • Alugbati – Malabar spinach, 落葵 (Basella alba)
  • Ampalaya – bitter melon (Momordica charantia)
  • Apulid – water chestnut (Eleocharis dulcis)
  • Atsuete – annatto seed (Bixa orellana)
  • Balatong – soy bean
  • Bataw – hyacinth bean (Lablab purpureus)
  • Bawang – garlic
    • native garlic (Allium sativum)
    • Taiwan garlic, elephant garlic, great-head garlic, oriental garlic, wild leek (Allium ampeloprasum var. ampeloprasum)
  • Bulaklak ng saging – banana blossom
  • Endiba – endive (Chicorium endivia subsp. endiva)
  • Gabi – taro (Colocasia esculenta)
  • Gabing San Fernando – malanga, tannia, yautia, cocoyam (Xanthosoma spp.)
  • Garbansos – chickpea, garbanzo bean
  • Kabute – mushroom
  • Kailan – Chinese broccoli, Chinese kale, 芥蘭 (Brassica oleracea var. alboglabra)
  • Kalabasa – squash
  • Kamatis – tomato
  • Kamote – sweet potato (Ipomoea batatas)
  • Kamoteng kahoy – cassava, manioc, tapioca, yuca (Manihot esculenta)
  • Kangkong – water spinach, ong choy, 蕹菜, kōng xīn cài, 空心菜, swamp morning glory (Ipomoea aquatica)
  • Kasubha – dried safflower flower, hong hua, 紅花 (Carthamus tinctorius)
  • Kasuy – cashew (Anacardium occidentale)
  • Katuray – agati flower, corkwood tree flower (Sesbania grandiflora)
  • Kinchay / Kintsay – Chinese celery, cutting celery, leaf celery, 芹 (Apium graveolens var. secalinum)
  • Kuchay / Kutsay – garlic chive, 韭菜 (Allium tuberosum)
  • Kundol – winter melon (Benincasa hispida)
  • Labanos – radish, daikon
  • Labong – bamboo shoot
  • Langkawas – galangal (Alpinia galanga)
  • Laurel – bay leaf, laurel
  • Letsugas / Litsugas – lettuce
  • Linga – sesame
  • Luya – ginger (Zingiber officinale)
  • Luyang dilaw – turmeric, yellow ginger (Curcuma longa)
  • Mais – corn
  • Malunggay – moringa (Moringa oleifera)
  • Mani – peanut
  • Mongo / Munggo – mung bean (Vigna radiata)
    • Toge / Togue – bean sprouts
  • Mustasa – mustard / mustard green, gai choy, 芥菜 (Brassica juncea)
  • Pandan – screw pine (Pandanus amaryllifolius)
  • Patani – lima bean
  • Patatas – potato (Solanum tuberosum)
  • Patola – angled loofah, ribbed gourd (Luffa acutangula)
  • Pechay / Petsay – bok choy, 白菜, qīng cài, 青菜, qīngjiāng bái cài, 清江白菜, xiǎo bái cài, 小白菜 (Brassica rapa subsp. chinensis)
    • Petsay Taiwan – Shanghai bok choy
  • Pechay Baguio / Petsay Wombok – napa cabbage, bái cài, 白菜, dà bái cài, 大白菜, Beijing bái cài, 北京白菜, huáng yá bái, wong nga bok, 黃芽白, siew choy, 紹菜 (Brassica rapa subsp. pekinensis)
  • Pipino – cucumber
  • Puso ng saging – banana heart
  • Repolyo – cabbage (Brassica oleracea var. capitata)
  • Saluyot – jute (Corchorus olitorius)
  • Sampalok – tamarind (Tamarindus indica)
  • Sangke – star anise (Illicium verum)
  • Sayote – chayote (Sechium edule)
  • Sibuyas – onion (Allium cepa)
  • Sibuyas na mura – green onion, scallion, 葱 (Allium spp.)
  • Sibuyas Tagalog – shallot (Allium cepa var. aggregatum)
  • Sigarilyas – winged bean (Psophocarpus tetragonolobus)
  • Sili – chili (Capsicum spp.)
  • Singkamas – jicama, yam bean (Pachyrhizus erosus)
  • Sitaw – yard-long bean (Vigna unguiculata sesquipedalis)
  • Sitsaro / Tsitsaro – snow pea, sugar pea, mangetout (Pisum sativum subsp. sativum var. macrocarpon)
  • Talong – eggplant, aubergine (Solanum melongena)
  • Tanglad – lemongrass (Cymbopogon spp.)
  • Tugi – Asiatic yam, lesser yam (Dioscorea esculenta)
  • Ube – purple yam (Dioscorea alata)
  • Ubod – coconut palm heart, coconut pith (Cocos nucifera)
  • Upo – calabash, bottle gourd (Lagenaria siceraria)
  • Uray – amaranth, pigweed (Amaranthus spp.)*
  • Wansoy – cilantro, coriander leaf, Chinese parsley, 芫荽 (Coriandrum sativum)

Filipinized but English name more common

  • Apyo / Seleri – celery, 芹菜 (Apium graveolens)
  • Brokoli – broccoli
  • Karot – carrot
  • Kuliplor – cauliflower
  • Espinaka / Ispinats / Polonchay / Polunchay – spinach, bō cài, 菠菜, phoe lêng chhài, 菠蓤菜 (Spinacia oleracea)*
  • Perehil – parsley
Strictly speaking the native Filipino alphabet does not have letters such as c or f amongst others. It was expanded in the Modern Filipino Alphabet to include these and more letters but official government guidelines encourage transliteration to the older alphabet. Since English is widely used and also an official language, adherence to the official guidelines in practice has been patchy. Recently the guidelines have been revised to be more accepting of English terms that have wide usage rather than trying to push artificial sounding transliterations. The English terms are now used even in Filipino language newspapers.

Same as English or no Tagalog equivalent

  • Artichoke (Cynara cardunculus)
  • Asparagus, 芦笋 (Asparagus officinalis)
  • Baguio spinach, New Zealand spinach, warrigal cabbage (Tetragonia tetragonioides)*
  • Okra, gumbo, lady's finger (Abelmoschus esculentus)
* A note on spinach: there seems to be a tendency in the Philippine context to refer to Spinacia oleracea as "Chinese spinach" to differentiate it from New Zealand spinach (Tetragonia tetragonioides). But Spinacia oleracea is what would be recognized as spinach elsewhere not Tetragonia tetragonioides. Moreover, "Chinese spinach" is more commonly recognized as a name for edible amaranth (Amaranthus tricolor, 苋菜). In the Philippines, however, the amaranth species that seems more recognized in some regions is Amaranthus spinosus.

Notes

As an Asian country, many different kinds of Asian vegetables that were not commonly seen in Western supermarkets until fairly recently are standard ingredients in Filipino cuisine. Despite this, as an archipelago separated from the main landmass of Asia, there are some Asian vegetables that aren't that common in the Philippines. Many standard vegetables were introduced by European colonists. As a tropical country many tropical fruits and vegetables are grown in the Philippines. Large plantations in Mindanao grow fruits and vegetables for export. Places like Baguio and Tagaytay on the other hand with their locations at higher elevations have cooler temperatures and are especially known for their farms' agricultural production of fresh green leafy vegetables. The Bicol Region is particularly productive when it comes to root crops.

Henry Sy, Sr.

Henry Sy, Sr. (October 15, 1924— ) is a self-made Chinese-Filipino businessman who is founder and head of the SM Group of Companies. He is generally acknowledged to be the richest man in the Philippines with an estimated net worth of US$8 billion according to Forbes. From humble beginnings, he went on to sell shoes and set up a store called Shoemart an enterprise that would eventually turn into the largest retailer and mall developer in the country. His commercial interests have since expanded and he has diversified into many other businesses including banking, residential and leisure development, mining, and power generation.

Henry Sy was born Sy Chi Sieng (literally "to reach for ultimate success") to father Sy Xiu Shi and mother Wu She Wang in the village of Hong Xi in the town of Longhu in Jinjiang near Xiamen in Fujian province China. At the age of twelve Henry Sy immigrated to the Philippines to join his father who had migrated earlier looking for better opportunities. Henry found his father struggling to make a living in Manila. He helped his father sell basic necessities like rice, sardines, and soap from a couple of grocery stores. After World War II with one of their stores burned down and the other looted, his father decided to go back to China, but Henry decided to stay.

He started selling shoes in Carriedo an area in Manila at the time with lots of foot traffic opening three stores in quick succession: Plaza (1946), Paris (1947), and Park Avenue (1948). He would later open Shoemart (1958), a name he'd continue to use for easier recall. His first department store would later follow in 1972 located in Quiapo. The move that would catapult Henry Sy into the top rung of success, however, would be his entry into mall development. The opening of SM City North EDSA in the mid-1980s in Quezon City and a little later the SM Megamall in Mandaluyong would mark the beginning of a string of mall openings that would make him the unquestioned mall magnate and leader in retail development in the country. The model of simple wide open spaces and air-conditioned malls he introduced were on a scale people hadn't seen before. People took to them and the concept of malling entered into the Filipino lexicon. In November 2007, the SM Mall of Asia opened, currently Henry Sy's and the country's largest, and one of the largest in the world.

In 2012, the SM Group has 42 malls in the Philippines with the number expected to increase to 46 by the end of the year. It also has 5 malls in China with 3 in development. The group had 173 retail outlets at the beginning of the year: SM Department Store (42), SaveMore (68), SM Supermarket (33), SM Hypermart(30) with more being added monthly.

SM Investments Corporation (SMIC) is Henry Sy's main holding company. His 61% controlling interest in March 2012 had an estimated worth of around PHP241.4 billion or US$5.6 billion. SM Prime Holdings (SMPH) is the mall developemnt arm of the SM Group. SM Development Corporation (SMDC) is involved in condiminium and resort development. Banco de Oro (BDO) is one of the Philippines' largest banks. Henry Sy's family also has control of China Banking Corporation, Belle Corporation, Highlands Prime Inc., and significant stakes in Atlas Mining, National Grid Corporation of the Philippines, and a number of other companies.

Tony Tan Caktiong

Antonio Tan Caktiong (January 5, 1953— ) is the founder and head of Jollibee Foods Corporation (JFC) the largest fast-food company in the Philippines. Brands under the Jollibee Foods umbrella include Jollibee, Chowking, Mang Inasal, Greenwich, Red Ribbon, and the Burger King franchise in the country. He is also a member of the Board of Trustees at St. Luke's Medical Center and the Asian Institute of Management, and a board director for First Generation Corporation, Philippine Long Distance Telephone Company, and the Temasek Foundation.

Tony Tan Caktiong is the third child of seven of immigrants from Fujian China who settled in Davao. He later went to Manila and graduated from the University of Santo Tomas in 1975 with a degree in chemical engineering. He has since honed his expertise with management tutoring certifications from Harvard University, Asian Institute of Management, University of Michigan Business School, Stanford University (Singapore) and Harvard Business School. He was selected by Ernst & Young as their World Entrepreneur of the Year in 2004.

Zobel de Ayala Family

The Zobel de Ayalas are a prominent landed family in the Philippines of Spanish and German ancestry who are behind the Ayala Group of Companies which has interests in real estate development, banking, telecommunications, water utilities, electronics, and car dealerships. Through their holding company Mermac Inc., they hold a controlling interest in the publicly traded Ayala Corporation one of the largest in the country and the holding company for the Ayala Group. Counting only the value of Mermac Inc.'s stake in Ayala Corporation in May 2012 and recent sales, the Zobel de Ayala family has a net worth in excess of US$3.2 billion although it remains unclear if any single member of the family is a billionaire.

The marriage in 1876 of the talented Jacobo Zobel Zangroniz and heiress Maria Trinidad Roxas de Ayala connected the Zobel name to the legacy established by the Roxas and Ayala families in the Philippines. The union produced five children: Fernando Antonio, twins Enrique and Alfonso, Margarita, and Gloria. Alfonso and Gloria would die while still young. Fernando Antonio remained a bachelor. In 1901 Jacobo's and Maria Trinidad's son Enrique Zobel de Ayala married first cousin Consuelo Roxas de Ayala. They would have three children: Jacobo, Alfonso and Mercedes. Consuelo died in 1908 due to a cholera epidemic. Three years later Enrique remarried. With Fermina Montojo, Enrique had four children: Matilde, Conseulo, Gloria, and Fernando who would grow up to be a noted abstract painter. It is the descendents of Enrique's children with Consuelo, however, who are most closely identified to the Zobel de Ayala name.

Despite its prominence and wealth, the fate of the Zobel de Ayala family's fortunes were severely threatened and reached a precarious low during the Japanese Occupation of the Philippines during World War II. With the family's assets frozen, and the death, destruction and food shortages caused by the war, Enrique died in 1943 worried that the work of his forbears had been for naught. A new era in the family's fortunes, however, would start soon after the end of the war spearheaded by Mercedes' husband Joseph McMicking who would mastermind the planning and development of the Zobel de Ayala family's vast tract of land in Makati turning it into the country's premier business district. McMicking would be aided by Jacobo's only son Enrique Emilio Jacobo "EZ" Zobel de Ayala and one of Alfonso's three children, son Jaime Zobel de Ayala.

Two out of Jaime's seven children, sons Jaime Augusto and Fernando, are now the most public face of the family in their roles as chief executive officer and chairman, and president and chief operating officer respectively of Ayala Corporation. With the passing of childless Mercedes McMicking in late 2005, and the distribution of her assets to her nieces and nephews, however, Enrique's two children Iñigo and Mercedes likely have the largest individual shares of the Zobel de Ayala fortune. Recently, Iñigo Zobel partnered with Roberto Ongpin and Joselito Campos through a holding firm Top Frontier Investment Holdings Inc. and, with other entities allied with Ongpin, took a controlling bloc of shares in San Miguel Corporation.

Companies in the Ayala Group include Ayala Land Inc. (ALI), Bank of the Philippine Islands (BPI), Globe Telecom Inc. (GLO), Manila Water Company Inc. (MWC), Integrated Microelectronics Inc., Azalea Technology Investments Inc., LiveIt Investments Ltd., Ayala Automotive Holdings Corporation, Honda Cars Makati Inc., Isuzu Automotive Dealership Inc., AG Holdings Ltd., and Ayala Foundation Inc.

Emilio Aguinaldo

Emilio Aguinaldo y Famy (March 22, 1869–February 6, 1964), Filipino revolutionary leader, first president of the Philippines.

Prime Ministers:

    Apolinario Mabini (January 21–May 7, 1899)  
    Pedro Paterno (May 7–November 13, 1899)
    
Political Parties:

    Magdalo faction of the Katipunan (1897)
    National Socialist Party (1935)

Positions:

    President of the Revolutionary Government (June 23, 1898–January 22, 1899)
    Dictator of the Dictatorial Government (May 24, 1898–June 22, 1898)
    President of the Biak-na-Bato Republic (November 2, 1897–December 15, 1897) 
    President of the Revolutionary Government set up by the Tejeros Convention 
    (March 22, 1897–November 1, 1897)
    General of the Revolutionary Army 

Other Positions:

    Member of the Council of State 
    (Roxas, Quirino, Magsaysay, Garcia, and Macapagal administrations)  
    Capitan Municipal, Kawit
    Cabeza de Barangay, Binakayan, Kawit

Notes

Aguinaldo was a principal figure in the Philippine struggle for independence during the revolutionary period. Successes on the battlefield against the Spanish vaulted him to the leadership of the Katipunan and Philippine revolutionary forces and, as evidenced by his writings, he could be an eloquent and stirring advocate for the Philippine cause.

Despite his key role in the fight for Philippine independence, however, many Filipinos today are cool towards him and his legacy. This is due to a number of reasons. First is his very controversial succession as head of the Katipunan over Andres Bonifacio at the Tejeros Convention that eventually led to Bonifacio's death on Aguinaldo's orders for treason. Second is the ultimate failure of the campaign for Philippine independence under his leadership. Third is the fact that in a struggle in which so many died he survived by getting captured and pledging allegiance to the United States and lived to an old age. Fourth, his cooperation with the Japanese during World War II is looked down upon by some.

Still a more forgiving picture for his actions can be drawn. Bonifacio's death came after moves by Bonifacio that undermined Aguinaldo's leadership and threatened to splinter the Philippine forces at a critical juncture during the revolution. Aguinaldo had initially commuted the death sentence for treason to banishment upon Bonifacio's capture but was prevailed upon by others to revoke his stay and proceed with execution. On the second point relating to the short-lived Philippine independence under Aguinaldo, he came very close to his ultimate goal with his strategy of appealing to the United States for support. A vote in the United States Senate on an amendment to the Treaty of Paris ending the Spanish-American War that promised the United States would respect Philippine independence was a tie that had to be broken by the United States vice president.

While Aguinaldo's self-preservation can be faulted for being unheroic, he also had a history of making tactical compromises that would allow him to fight later as in the Pact of Biak-na-Bato. His experience also wasn't without personal loss. Emilio's brother died in battle while fulfilling a promise to him that a critical position would be held from the Spanish. Emilio Aguinaldo after the conflict with the United States took to wearing a black tie in public in commemoration of all those who died in the struggle for independence and did not cease doing so until the Philippines finally gained independence. As for his cooperation with the Japanese, he saw it in terms of what he thought would be best for the Filipino people. One suspects the betrayal he perceived he experienced at the hands of the United States affected his judgment, but his desire in not wanting Filipinos dying in a war mainly between two foreign powers is also made more understandable.

Where to Buy in Manila

Where to find a certain item in Metro Manila? It's a question every Manileño has asked at one point or another. Manila is a world city and has most of the things you'd want in its markets but it also has well-travelled citizens who are knowledgeable and demanding. The following is a list of some everyday items common in other parts of the world that are rarer in the Philippines and where to find them in Manila.

Food


Where to buy almond powder in Manila?

Almond powder was seen in the international section of Metro Supermarket.

Where can I get brown bean sauce / paste in Manila? Where can I buy yellow bean sauce / paste in Manila?

Brown bean sauce or yellow bean sauce is a relatively common ingredient in Southern Chinese and Southeast Asian cuisine. It was seen in Makati Supermarket and in Shoppers' Mart on Ongpin.

Where do I buy red fermented beancurd in Manila?

Red fermented bean curd is a relatively common ingredient in Chinese cuisine. It was seen in Shopper's Mart on Ongpin.

Who sells red rice vinegar in Manila?

Red rice vinegar is a relatively common ingredient in Chinese cuisine. It was seen in South Supermarket and in Bee Tin Grocery on Ongpin.

Where to get Sichuan pepper in Manila?

Sichuan pepper is a relatively common ingredient in Chinese cuisine. It was seen in Bee Tin Grocery on Ongpin.

Where to buy wheat starch in Manila?

Wheat starch is a relatively common ingredient in Chinese cuisine. It is sometimes called ting powder / flour or cheng powder. It was seen in the international section of Metro Supermarket and in Bee Tin Grocery on Ongpin.

Household


Where to find borax in Manila? Where can I find boric acid powder in Manila?

Borax is a chemical compound with multiple uses. It can be used as a household cleaner, insecticide, or welding flux. The most obvious places to look for it are in hardware stores and drugstores. Unfortunately, during actual attempts to find it, most of the places visited said that they did not carry it or were currently out-of-stock. A closely related compound boric acid powder was found in an imported American insecticide formulation at True Value Hardware but was probably ten times more expensive than a locally sourced supply. Borax was eventually found at an RFC Department Store where the main use it was associated with was as an aid in billiards. Still it wasn't in large enough quantity.  More research turns up Alysons' Chemicals in Quezon City (contact# 712-2266) as a supplier for boric acid powder and some chemist shops on Rizal Ave. near Bambang like Crismon Enterprises (contact# 711-6403).

Economy of the Philippines

The Philippine economy has an estimated nominal gross domestic product of US$213 billion, the 45th largest economy in the world. When adjusted for purchasing price parity, GDP is estimated at US$389 billion, the 32nd largest. A newly industrialized country, the Philippines is transitioning from an agricultural economy to one based more on manufacturing and services.

Fast growth characteristic of a developing country was seen in the years after World War II but slowed and even reversed in the 1980s as political instability borne from authoritarian rule eventually surfaced and unravelled the Marcos regime. Despite initial enthusiasm with the return of democracy, a debilitating power crisis soon engulfed the country, a manifestation of poor planning and underinvestment in infrastructure. Recovery was slow thereafter with growth lagging regional peers. The pace of growth has become more consistent in recent years. This is in part due to the development of a vibrant business process outsourcing (BPO) service sector. Favorable demographics support a promising future outlook.

Philippines

The Philippines is a country in Southeast Asia. An archipelago of over 7100 islands, it is surrounded by several bodies of water. The Luzon Strait to its north separates it from Taiwan. The Philippine Sea is situated to the east and beyond that the wider expanse of the Pacific Ocean. The Celebes Sea to the south is located between the country and Indonesia. The Sulu Sea separates the country from the island of Borneo while across the West Philippine Sea lies Vietnam. The country is generally divided into three main geographic regions: the northern island of Luzon, the central islands of the Visayas, and the southern island of Mindanao.

History


Ancient Times


The earliest human remains found in the Philippines are those of the Callao Man who lived around 67,000 years ago, although there is evidence of stone tools possibly going back 700,000 years. Early peoples that settled the Philippine archipelago around 30,000 years ago are believed to have come by way of the Indonesian archipelago and elsewhere through various migrations.
The basic unit of settlement was the barangay (believed to be derived from balanghai a Malay word for boat that came to be used to denote a communal settlement). A datu (chief) led the barangay which was broadly divided into a hierarchy of nobles, freemen, dependent and landless agricultural workers and slaves. Over the centuries, Indo-Malay migrants were joined by Chinese traders. Islam was introduced to the Philippines by traders and proselytizers from the Indonesian islands. By A.D. 1500, Islam had been established in the Sulu archipelago. From there it spread to Mindanao and by 1565 had reached the Manila area. As Islam was being introduced, so too was Christianity which came with the arrival of the Spanish.

Spanish Era


In March 1521, Ferdinand Magellan, on his expedition that would eventually circumnavigate the globe, arrived off Samar. He was the first European recorded to have landed in the Philippines. Magellan claimed land for the king of Spain but was killed in a clash with the local chief Lapu-Lapu. Following several more Spanish expeditions, the first permanent settlement was established in Cebu in 1565 by Miguel López de Legazpi. After defeating a local Muslim ruler, the Spanish set up their capital at Manila in 1571, and they named their new colony after King Philip II of Spain. In doing so, the Spanish sought to acquire a share in the lucrative spice trade, develop better contacts with China and Japan, and gain converts to Christianity. Only the third objective was eventually realized. As with other Spanish colonies, church and state became inseparably linked in carrying out Spanish objectives. Several Roman Catholic religious orders were assigned the responsibility of Christianizing the local population. The civil administration built upon the traditional village organization and used traditional local leaders to rule indirectly for Spain. Through these efforts, a new cultural community was developed, but Muslims (known as Moros by the Spanish) and upland tribal peoples remained detached and alienated.

Trade in the Philippines centered around the “Manila galleons,” which sailed from Acapulco on the west coast of Mexico (New Spain) with shipments of silver bullion and minted coin that were exchanged for return cargoes of Chinese goods, mainly silk textiles and porcelain. There was no direct trade with Spain and little exploitation of indigenous natural resources. Most investment was in the galleon trade. But, as this trade thrived, another unwelcome element was introduced—sojourning Chinese entrepreneurs and service providers.

During the Seven Years’ War (1756–63), British East India Company forces captured Manila. Although the Philippines was returned to Spain at the end of the war, the British occupation marked the beginning of the end of the old order. Rebellions broke out in the north, and while the Spanish were busy fighting the British, Moros raided from the south. The Chinese community, resentful of Spanish discrimination, supported the British with laborers and armed men. The restoration of Spanish rule brought reforms aimed at promoting the economic development of the islands and making them independent of subsidies from New Spain. The galleon trade ceased in 1815, and from that date onward the Royal Company of the Philippines, which had been chartered in 1785, promoted direct and tariff-free trade between the islands and Spain. Cash crops were cultivated for trade with Europe and Latin America, but profits diminished after Spain’s Latin American colonies became independent in the 1810s and 1820s. In 1834 the Royal Company of the Philippines was abolished, and free trade was formally recognized. With its excellent harbor, Manila became an open port for Asian, European, and North American traders. In 1873 additional ports were opened to foreign commerce, and by the late nineteenth century three crops—tobacco, abaca, and sugar—dominated Philippine exports.

Revolutionary Period


Also in the late nineteenth century, Chinese immigration, now with official approval, increased, and Chinese mestizos became a feature in Filipino social and economic life. So, too, did the growing Filipino native elite class of ilustrados (literally, enlightened ones), who became increasingly receptive to liberal and democratic ideas. Conservative Catholic friars continued to dominate the Spanish establishment, however. They resisted the inclusion of native clergy and were economically secure, with their large land holdings and control of churches, schools, and other establishments. Despite the bias against native priests, brothers, and nuns, some members of Filipino religious orders became prominent to the point of leading local religious movements and even insurrections against the establishment. Additionally, ilustrados returning from education and exile abroad brought new ideas that merged with folk religion to spur a national resistance.

One of the early nationalist leaders was José Rizal, a physician, scientist, scholar, and writer. His writings as a member of the Propaganda Movement (intellectually active, upper-class Filipino reformers) had a considerable impact on the awakening of the Filipino national consciousness. His books were banned, and he lived in self-imposed exile. Rizal returned from overseas in 1892 to found the Liga Filipina (Philippine League), a national, nonviolent political organization, but he was arrested and exiled and the league dissolved. One result was the split of the nationalist movement between the reform-minded ilustrados and a more revolutionary and independence-minded plebeian constituency. Many of the latter joined the Katipunan, a secret society founded by Andres Bonifacio in 1892 and committed to winning national independence. By 1896, the year the Katipunan rose in revolt against Spain, it had 30,000 members. Although Rizal, who had again returned to the Philippines, was not a member of the Katipunan, he was arrested and executed on December 30, 1896, for his alleged role in the rebellion. With Rizal’s martyrdom, the rebels, led by Emilio Aguinaldo as president, were filled with new determination. Spanish troops defeated the insurgents, however, and Aguinaldo and his government went into exile in Hong Kong in December 1897.

When the Spanish-American War broke out in April 1898, the Americans easily defeated Spain’s fleet in Manila Bay while a German fleet watched. Aguinaldo returned and issued a declaration of independence on June 12, 1898. His 12,000 troops kept the Spanish forces bottled up in Manila while U.S. troops landed. The Spanish cause was doomed, but the Americans did nothing to accommodate the inclusion of Aguinaldo in the succession. The Treaty of Paris, signed on December 10, 1898, by the United States and Spain, ceded the Philippines, Guam, and Puerto Rico to the United States, recognized Cuban independence, and gave US$20 million to Spain. A revolutionary congress convened at Malolos, north of Manila, promulgated a constitution on January 21, 1899, and inaugurated Aguinaldo as president of the new republic two days later. Fighting between American and Filipino troops started almost as soon as the Spanish had been defeated. Hostilities broke out in February 1899, and by March 1901 Aguinaldo had been captured and the main body of his forces defeated. Resistance continued until 1903. The Moros, suspicious of both the Christian Filipinos and the Americans, remained largely neutral, but eventually their own armed resistance had to be subjugated, and Moro territory was placed under U.S. military rule until 1914.

American Era


U.S. rule over the Philippines had two phases. The first phase was from 1898 to 1935, during which time Washington defined its colonial mission as one of tutelage and preparing the Philippines for eventual independence. Political organizations developed quickly, and the popularly elected Philippine Assembly (lower house) and the U.S.-appointed Philippine Commission (upper house) served as a bicameral legislature. The ilustrados formed the Federalista Party, but their statehood platform had limited appeal. In 1905 the party was renamed the National Progressive Party and took up a platform of independence. The Nacionalista Party was formed in 1907 and dominated Filipino politics until after World War II. Its leaders were not ilustrados. Despite their “immediate independence” platform, the party leaders participated in a collaborative leadership with the United States. A major development emerging in the post-World War I period was resistance to elite control of the land by tenant farmers, who were supported by the Socialist Party and the Communist Party of the Philippines. Tenant strikes and occasional violence occurred as the Great Depression wore on and cash-crop prices collapsed.

The second period of United States rule—from 1936 to 1946—was characterized by the establishment of the Commonwealth of the Philippines and occupation by Japan during World War II. Legislation passed by the U.S. Congress in 1934 provided for a 10-year period of transition to independence. The country’s first constitution was framed in 1934 and overwhelmingly approved by plebiscite in 1935, and Manuel Quezon was elected president of the commonwealth. Quezon later died in exile in 1944 and was succeeded by Vice President Sergio Osmeña. Japan attacked the Philippines on December 8, 1941, and occupied Manila on January 2, 1942. Tokyo set up an ostensibly independent republic, which was opposed by underground and guerrilla activity that eventually reached large-scale proportions. A major element of the resistance in the Central Luzon area was furnished by the Huks (short for Hukbalahap, or People’s Anti-Japanese Army). Allied forces invaded the Philippines in October 1944, and the Japanese surrendered on September 2, 1945.

Post-WWII Period


World War II had been demoralizing for the Philippines, and the islands suffered from rampant inflation and shortages of food and other goods. Various trade and security issues with the United States also remained to be settled before Independence Day. The Allied leaders wanted to purge officials who collaborated with the Japanese during the war and to deny them the right to vote in the first postwar elections. Commonwealth President Osmeña, however, countered that each case should be tried on its own merits. The successful Liberal Party presidential candidate, Manual Roxas, was among those collaborationists. Independence from the United States came on July 4, 1946, and Roxas was sworn in as the first president. The economy remained highly dependent on U.S. markets, and the United States also continued to maintain control of 23 military installations. A bilateral treaty was signed in March 1947 by which the United States continued to provide military aid, training, and matériel. Such aid was timely, as the Huk guerrillas rose again, this time against the new government. They changed their name to the People’s Liberation Army (Hukbong Mapagpalaya ng Bayan) and demanded political participation, disbandment of the military police, and a general amnesty. Negotiations failed, and a rebellion began in 1950 with communist support. The aim was to overthrow the government. The Huk movement dissipated into criminal activities by 1951, as the better-trained and -equipped Philippine armed forces and conciliatory government moves toward the peasants offset the effectiveness of the Huks.

Populist Ramón Magsaysay of the Nacionalista Party was elected president in 1953 and embarked on widespread reforms that benefited tenant farmers in the Christian north while killed, and by 1954 the movement had waned. After Magsaysay’s death in an airplane crash in 1957, he was succeeded by Vice President Carlos P. Garcia. Garcia was elected in his own right the same year, and he advanced the nationalist theme of “Filipinos First,” reaching agreement with the United States to relinquish large areas of land no longer needed for military operations. In 1961 the Liberal Party candidate, Diosdado Macapagal, was elected president. Subsequent negotiations with the United States over base rights led to considerable anti-American feelings and demonstrations. Macapagal sought closer relations with his Southeast Asian neighbors and convened a summit with the leaders of Indonesia and Malaysia in the hope of developing a spirit of consensus, which did not emerge.

Marcos Years


Nacionalista Party leader Ferdinand Marcos came to dominate the political scene for the next two decades, beginning with his election to the presidency in 1965. During his first term, Marcos initiated ambitious public works projects that improved the general quality of life while providing generous pork-barrel benefits for his friends. Marcos perceived that his promised land reform program would alienate the politically all-powerful landowner elite, and thus it was never forcefully implemented. He lobbied strenuously for economic and military aid from the United States while resisting significant involvement in the Second Indochina War (1954–75). In 1967 the Philippines became a founding member of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN). Marcos became the first president to be reelected (in 1969), but early in his second term economic growth slowed, optimism faded, and the crime rate increased. In addition, a new communist insurgency, this time—starting in 1968—led by the new Communist Party of the Philippines-Marxist-Leninist and its military arm, the New People’s Army, was on the rise. In 1969 the Moro National Liberation Front was founded and conducted an insurgency in Muslim areas. Political violence blamed on leftists, but probably initiated by government agents provocateurs, led Marcos to suspend habeas corpus as a prelude to martial law.

Marcos declared martial law on September 21, 1972, and did not lift it until January 17, 1981. During this time, he called for self-sacrifice and an end to the old society. However, in the “New Society” Marcos’s cronies and his wife, former movie actress Imelda Romualdez-Marcos, wilfully engaged in rampant corruption. With her husband’s support, Imelda Marcos built her own power base. She became governor of Metropolitan Manila and minister of human settlements. The previously nonpolitical armed forces became highly politicized, with high-ranking positions being given to Marcos loyalists. In 1979 the United States reaffirmed Philippine sovereignty over U.S. military bases and continued to provide military and economic aid to the Marcos regime. When martial law was lifted in 1981 and a “New Republic” proclaimed, little had actually changed, and Marcos easily won reelection.

The beginning of the end of the Marcos era occurred when his chief political rival, Liberal Party leader Benigno “Ninoy” Aquino, Jr., who had been jailed by Marcos for eight years, was assassinated as he disembarked from an airplane at the Manila International Airport on August 21, 1983, following medical treatment in the United States. Marcos cronies were charged with this crime but were acquitted. Aquino, however, became a martyr and his murder the focus of popular indignation against a corrupt regime. The Catholic Church, a coalition of old political opposition groups, the business elite, the left wing, and even factions of the armed forces all began to exert pressure on the regime. There also was foreign pressure and, feeling confident with the support given by the Reagan White House, Marcos called a “snap” presidential election for February 7, 1986. When the Marcos-dominated National Assembly proclaimed Marcos the winner, Cardinal Jaime Sin and key military leaders (including Minister of Defense Juan Ponce Enrile and acting Chief of Staff of the Armed Forces Lieutenant General Fidel V. Ramos) rallied around the apparent majority vote winner, Aquino’s widow, Corazon Cojuangco Aquino. The People Power Movement—a popular uprising of priests, nuns, ordinary citizens, and children, supported by defecting military units—ousted Marcos on the day of his inauguration (February 25, 1986) and brought Aquino to power in an almost bloodless revolution.

Aquino to the Present


Corazon Aquino had wide popular support but no political organization. Her vice president, Salvador H. “Doy” Laurel, had an organization but little popular support. Enrile and Ramos also had large stakes in what they saw as a coalition government. The coalition unraveled quickly, and there were several attempts, including unsuccessful military coups, to oust Aquino. She survived her fractious term, however, and was succeeded in the 1992 election by Ramos, who had served loyally as chief of staff of the armed forces and secretary of national defense under Aquino.

President Ramos worked at coalition building and overcoming the divisiveness of the Aquino years. Mutinous right-wing soldiers, communist insurgents, and Muslim separatists were convinced to cease their armed activities against the government and were granted amnesty. In an act of reconciliation, Ramos allowed the remains of Ferdinand Marcos—he had died in exile in the United States in 1989—to be returned to the Philippines for burial in 1993. Efforts by supporters of Ramos to gain passage of an amendment that would allow him to run for a second term were met with large-scale protests supported by Cardinal Sin and Corazon Aquino, leading Ramos to declare he would not run again.

Joseph Estrada, who was vice president during Ramos's term and enjoyed widespread popularity, was elected president in 1998. Within a year, however, Estrada’s popularity declined sharply amid allegations of cronyism and corruption and failure to remedy the problems of poverty. Once again, street rallies supported by Cardinal Sin and Corazon Aquino took place. Then, in 2000 Senate investigators accused Estrada of having accepted bribes from illegal gambling businesses. Following an abortive Senate impeachment trial, growing street protests, and the withdrawal of support by the armed forces, Estrada was forced out of office on January 20, 2001.

Vice President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo (the daughter of the late President Diosdado Macapagal) was sworn in as Estrada’s successor on the day of his departure. Her accession to power was further legitimated by the mid-term congressional and local elections, when her coalition later won an overwhelming victory, but the elections were fraught with allegations of coercion, fraud, and vote buying. Macapagal-Arroyo’s initial term in office was marked by fractious coalition politics as well as a military mutiny in Manila in July 2003 that led her to declare a month-long nationwide state of rebellion, as a result of which charges were filed against more than 1,000 individuals. Macapagal-Arroyo had declared in December 2002 that she would not contest the May 2004 presidential election, but she reversed herself in October 2003 and decided to run. She was reelected and sworn in for her own six-year term as president on June 30, 2004. With this new mandate, she was able to move with greater assurance on the political and economic reform agenda that had stalled during her first term in office although her administration was still continually hounded by allegations of corruption.

In 2010, Benigno "Noynoy" Aquino III, Ninoy's and Corazon's son, became president.