Coffee Break

Smells Like Freshly Ground Heaven

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This blog talks about everything and anything under the sun.


From music, to love, to life - kinda like the stuff people talk about, over a cup of coffee.


Batangas Brew

Popularly known as Kapeng Barako, and originates from the province of Batangas, in the Philippines.

Barako is a Filipino term for an animal male stud that has become associated with the image of a strong man.

The coffee is so-called because of its imposing and distinct pungent aroma.

Showing posts with label General Interest. Show all posts
Showing posts with label General Interest. Show all posts

Christmas+Kids=Love

Many Christmases ago, my little brother refused to go to bed on Christmas Eve even after being told that it was time for him to sleep.

"I wanna wait for Santa Claus," he said.

"But he does not want to be seen," I reasoned with the 5-year old, wide-eyed kid.

"But, why?"

"Because that's the rule."

Our family always prepares for a festive Christmas Eve, and that year was no exception. My father, a genius in the kitchen, whipped up dish after dish of typical BatangueƱo food. Kaldereta, Apritada, Pochero, Morcon etc. But the Noche Buena wasn't the highlight of evening. It was the youngest of the brood who stole the limelight. He had learned several Christmas songs and was singing them gleefully to us. Each time he got stumped... which happened at the beginning of several stanzas, we'd butt in and supply a line or two. Santa Claus is Coming to Town and Rudolf the Red Nose Reindeer were the best. The adults sang along the lines of the ever popular "you better watch out, you better not pout" and the recital of reindeer names in the lovely ode to Rudolf. Indeed, with the youthful enthusiasm and anticipation by the little boy with the infectious laugh, the teens and the adults were somehow reintroduced to the magic of Santa Claus and the childlike excitement of the holiday season.

And so every Christmas Eve, while our mother tries desperately to send kid brother to bed, Santa aka our father arranges the gifts and carefully counterchecks the "list" tucked in the branches of the Christmas tree. At midnight we’d all gather at the dining table, but not before we check under the Christmas tree for gifts with our names and our Christmas socks for goodies and money.

That year, my brother had made his Christmas list by himself for the first time. He didn't want us to read it. And our mother sternly warned my sister and me to not, under any circumstances, sneak behind and take a peek at our little brother's precious list. But of course we looked, the minute we got a chance. And the joke was on us, because the list was an enumeration of stuff he wanted which we already knew about. Toy trucks (he even wrote the brand), video tapes, computer games, hot wheels, etc. The surprising part, other than that he didn't misspell anything, was that the list was relatively short. Our brother, even back then, was already showing the trait that he would display unto adulthood, he's not materialistic. And that's the irony considering how "materials", "stuff", "gifts" take over people’s lives during Christmas season.

There's something stressful and comforting about Christmas rituals. Stressful because there's a certain expectation to do things that people are supposed to do during this time of year, like decorating, the mad-rush to the stores to shop for the relatives and the godchildren, deciding to attend or not to attend parties, or to accept which particular invitation.

But ah... they are also comforting. There's the familiarity, the soothing feeling of being around family while doing some things that have become an annual practice. There’s the general happy disposition of people everywhere.

They say that as people grow up, it takes away some of the fun out of Christmas, because let's face it, grown ups have problems, grown ups worry over different things. But for my family, Christmas is a family tradition. And so this year, I will embrace Christmas with much vigor. I will welcome it with joy. I will sit down for Noche Buena and not think about anything else but the food before me and the effort that was put in preparing them. I will not take away the surprise by telling my parents and family what I want to get for Christmas. I will sit down and slowly open my gifts. I will savor Christmas just like I did as a young child years ago.

And I might even stay up with my brother and sing Christmas songs with him, as we wait for Santa to show up.

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Shocks- A Musical Tragic-Comedy

The wedding march was played. A Mercedes Benz came in and the spotlight was focused on it as it pulled up at the main entrance. All eyes were pulled towards it like iron to magnet. Veronica, radiant in her beautiful, white wedding gown, and accompanied by her bridesmaids, stepped out of the car. Near the altar, at the other end of the main aisle, stood Christopher. As the bride walked down the aisle the choir sang a capella. A shot rang out. And the gym went dark.

When the lights came back on, all were focused on the groom who was carrying his bride in his arms laughing out loud. The lights went out again.

That describes the opening scene of SHOCKS, a musical tragic-comedy and social commentary play subtitled “How to Kill the Bride on her Wedding Day.”

The script relates a tragic love story between two characters that are so different in many aspects. But the script goes beyond the conventional rich-boy-meets-poor-girl plot. It also expresses the sentiments of students living out a life of friendship, love, and survival, without neglecting social issues such as premarital sex, responsible parenthood, agrarian unrest, poverty and discrimination. It is a whimsical love story weaved in the common life of students that can draw us in yet make us ask striking questions and can open our minds to the often ignored realities of life.

SHOCKS features familiar contemporary songs from the Cranberries, Celine Dion, Julia Fordham, Barbra Streisand, Martin Nievera, Regine Velasquez and the Eraserheads. It also features cuts from the musical Les Miserables, the Disney classic Beauty and the Beast and the Lion King. It is the brainchild of Juan dela Cruz, a Xavier University alumnus , and choreographer/director/ performer Nelson Reyes.

SHOCKS will run every Friday and Saturday until December 20 at the Xavier University Little Theater. Matinee is at 3 pm and the regular show starts at 7 in the evening. For ticket inquiries please call 09178992300.

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Malling, Shopping and this Place Called Shang

Filipinos know where things run right- at a shopping mall. Everyday visitors in the hundreds of thousands stop at a shopping center to shop, eat or simply to recharge. Inside a clean, neat, user-friendly mall, somehow one feels safe and sane.

My favorite mall is Shangri-La Plaza at Edsa Shaw Boulevard. Programmed for the upwardly mobile market, it has one of the largest lobbies in the country, and a very modern revolving glass door. There’s a red carpet runner on the main entrance, giving the patrons the feeling that there is something special about this shopping haven, the very moment they step in.

Rustan's which serves high-end buyers is the major tenant with a 2.2 hectare department store. A feather in the developer's cap is William B. Shaw Theater, home for Repertory Philippines which increasingly draws appreciative audiences for its English-language repertiore. Entertainment and shopping go hand in glove with two cinemas, a game center, marvelous boutiques and shopping chains with ample window space for creative dressing. Every floor has service entrance hidden from public view to benefit tenants. Only 55 percent of space is being leased, projecting Shangri-La as grand, sleek, capacious, and never over-crowded.

Shopping malls kind of give urbanity and progress a beautiful face. It makes people feel, perhaps only temporarily, that the general way of life has improved. To see Filipinos at a relaxed mood, drop by a mall. Away from the blistering heat and the noisy streets, it is an urban oasis.

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different paths

college campus lawn

wires in front of sky

aerial perspective

clouds

clouds over the highway

The Poultney Inn

apartment for rent