It may seem a
bit odd for some people to combine an art gallery together with an intimate
dining set up. But for some reason, it perfectly jived—and such was the case at
Comida Chefs. Located at the second floor of Caballete Art Gallery, along that
bustling Kamias Road in Quezon City, Comida Chefs is a brainchild of renowned fashion designer Danny Dela Cuesta, who had traveled around the world and studied a culinary
course in Europe. He used to have a restaurant in Lucky Plaza mall in Singapore
which served a fusion of Singaporean + Filipino cuisines, but he decided to
come home to the Philippines and open up a catering business and a small dining
area that serves Ilocano-fusion. This is his specialization as he’s a regional
cuisine developer. He first opened up Comida Ilocandia along Timog but he had
to close it down when an opportunity to partner with an art gallery opened
because such is the trend now. Thus, Comida Chefs was born.
There are a
lot of things I love about Comida Chefs. First of all, they do not use any preservatives
on their food—everything is from the scratch, no instant artificial flavorings
or anything with MSG. They use only natural stuff, the kind our grandma used to
cook. Secondly, I liked the idea that they are leaning towards heritage foods
while still giving them a twist of modern cooking. And finally, I liked the
set-up as well. They do personal chefs via their Comida Chefs Catering and
business development. For a minimum number of 150 persons, they could give 7
variants of food for Php150 per head. That’s a good value for money right?
Comida Chefs
isn’t exactly a full blown restaurant but it is pretty much a hole-in-the-wall.
The ambiance is rather homey with funny cartoon characters painted on the wall
as you get upstairs to the dining area. Upon getting to the second floor, there
are huge lanterns adorning the ceiling which creates a bit of romantic mood.
We were
served with Chef’s Spalog (derived from spaghetti luglog). It’s his version of
the popular Pancit palabok sans the rich orange sauce. It’s made of the same
luglog starch based noodles of authentic pancit palabok but it’s given a twist
using pesto sauce mixed with tinapa flakes+ seafood toppings. It tasted okay,
but since I could manage to do this in my own kitchen, I’d say there’s nothing
quite extraordinary about Comida Chefs spaghetti loglog.
What I’d like
to really rave about was the other noodle dish called Tangy Rice Stick Soup.
It’s made from homemade hearty rice sticks in sour minty and spicy broth with
fish balls and squid balls, tofu and salted eggs as toppings. I love its rich
flavors and it’s really a comfort food. It brings together all the flavors one
can manage in one cup—tangy, sweet, a bit salty with some hint of mint and yes,
with a kick of the spice here and there. A real fusion of flavors that gives
one’s palate an exercise. I swear, I think I won’t mind eating this Tangy Rice
Stick Soup for a week and still not getting tired of it. This is highly
recommended on a rainy day, on days when you are tired and feeling sick or you
simply want to uplift your spirit. It will leave you wanting for your next cup
and the next thing you’ll know, you’re full but not feeling bloated.
We were also
served with Comida Chefs’ Longaburger—a trio of beef, chicken and pork rolled
together with lemon grass. Cheese sauce and sour cream. I love it as well. It
reminds me of souvlaki, only this time it’s served with authentic Asian
flavors.
End your meal
with Latija Comida—banana cinnamon trifle which resembles tiramisu. According
to the Chef, Latija is an old Spanish pastry served only in Easter. It’s made
from milk sponge cake, caramelized banana, custard cream and powdered cinnamon
sugar.
Oh, and
before I forget, make sure you order Comida Chefs’ Pandan Lemongrass Cooler.
It’s pandan lemongrass tea blended with pandan syrup. It tastes really good and
so refreshing. Best of all, it goes well with almost any of the viands or
snacks you can order from Comida chefs’ menu.
I wish I
could try other items which Comida Chefs offers on their menu such as
Ensalada/Ceviches, their All-Day Value meals (adobo Antigua, Longanisa with
eggs, Higado, bagoong rice bowl, pork bbq, crispy bagnet) etc. There’s more to
try and perhaps it’s enough reason to come back to Comida Chefs soon. I’d
certainly be back.
If you want
to experience Comida Chefs Gallery Café degustacion just as I did, come and
visit them at the 2nd floor of Caballete Art Gallery, 111-A Kamias
Road, Quezon City
Disclaimer: I
am not compensated for this post. Opinions are 100% my own.
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