Tag Archives: negros museum

Museum Café: Simple Treats to Brighten Up Your Week


Food has been one of my favorite topics in conversation and writing blog reviews. I am more inspired currently with food since I am finishing up Hell’s Kitchen series from Season 1 and currently Season 9. Never mind that foul mouth I constantly hear, just love the  foods I see. When it comes to good food, I always remember the Museum Café and all my dining experiences there. This is probably the n-th time since I have featured Museum Café and I sometimes wonder why I am not tired of doing so. The reason? It is because I have seen there quality food, great ambience and wonderful service. Those are the three things I look for good restaurants or cafés.

Number one rule of the thumb when it comes to good food is freshness. Fresh ingredients retain the nutrients in the food and has a complete flavor than processed or chilled food. Local delicacies and cuisine have been known for the classic mix of taste and in our kitchens, we have even made improvements with old recipes. Almost all of the ingredients for global cuisines are here for the take.

Mexican Red Kidney Bean Soup

Soak the washed beans overnight in water and cook the next day in the same water without salt till soft. Add cooked smoked pork rib, and bell peppers; baked onion, garlic and adjuma pepper. A little bit spicy but delicious.

Malaysian Tanigue Curry

Just flown in from Kota Kinabalu: Malaysian hand mixed spices for fish curry. In Kota Kinabalu, there are lots of tanigue in the weekend markets and here it is the same too. The tanigue used for this dish we buy from Talisay City Market and made this mild fish curry. Nice with brown organic rice and our fresh salad.

Le Nègre (La Negrita)

The ultimate chocolate cake -without flour-, eggs, butter, brown sugar, muscovado, and nearly one kilo dark Swiss chocolate for the whole cake. With a layer crunchy chocolate on top, dusted with cacao, wet chocolate, dry chocolate all sensations in one.

Roasted Anis Pork Belly with Tuba sauce

We marinated a ‘bacon slab’ for 4 days covered with anis seed. Left it in the oven on low temperature for 10 hours and roasted it, glazed with honey. Sixteen liters fresh sparkling tuba were reduced until 0.5 liter sauce, concentrated to a syrup, beautiful in sour-sweet balance, creamy with a hint of the tuba taste. Served with our salad, bread of choice or organic brown rice.

Shrimp Galore

We only buy shrimps in the market when we see a few shrimps still moving, to be sure they are fresh. At home rinsed and directly in plenty boiling ‘seawater’: 35 grams Bago Sea-salt per liter water. The best and most original way to cook shrimps. One minute for small shrimps up to 3 minutes for big shrimps. Quickly cooled down in the fridge. We serve shrimps in different styles of cuisine and here are some choices:

  • Served as Shrimp Mayonnaise with salad on our Artisan Bread of your choice.
  • Served as Full meal Shrimp Salad, a large rich salad with shrimps and a choice of our Artisan Bread.
  • Served as starter Shrimp Cocktail, cold with some lettuce and creamy cocktail sauce with a hint of brandy.

Sounds palatable? Definitely is and absolutely cooked to your liking. My favorite seafood – shrimp, is still in the menu for few weeks and transformed to some other dishes. That is one of their must try dishes there so if you are not allergic to shrimps, go and order.

After enjoying your main course, why not grab some desserts too. Their Le Nègre is a must try cake and is definitely improved by the muscovado added to the ingredients. You can also have a taste of their various selections of tarts from the usual to those ones made from fruits not used before in tarts like chico or tambis. Have a glass of wine or a cup of brewed iced tea to gulp all that food down. I usually have at least a glass of wine but brewed iced tea is good as well. Museum Café is open from Tuesdays to Sundays from 10am to 10pm and can accomodate sixty people for a function at Phinma Gallery. Here’s a tip, the best time to go there is in the evenings.


Museum Café: Vegetable Juices and Improved Selections


As the trend for healthy living escalates nowadays, restaurants and café joints are taking the cue in serving healthy selections from their menu. It is not only food that is now beginning to be served organic and healthy, so are drinks too. Fresh fruits and vegetables do well for the body and their good benefits are best experienced when eaten raw. Oftentimes, heating fruits and vegetables at times kills the enzymes and would not work as good for the body. The solution into ingesting those with enzymes and nutrients whole or effective is to juice them up. The Museum Café has taken healthy living by adding into their selection tomato and carrot juice which would work well for the health conscious. Why should we drink tomato or carrot juice? The Museum Café explains why.

Juicing is the fast track to good health. Using organic vegetables for juicing allows you to take in more vegetables at one time than you would by eating raw or cooked vegetable. Concentrated vegetable mass in liquid forms is easy to digest up, thus making juicing daily ideal for good health and curing health problems. The body is more able to metabolize nutrient into our body cells, especially since uncooked vegetables retain enzymes. Raw vegetables provide all the enzymes you need for optimum assimilation. Carrots are usually a staple. You can add apples, greens or beets but carrots are not as perishable and offer more juice at less prices.

Carrots are great as a base for juicing whatever else you want to include in your fresh vegetable juice. More importantly, carrots are amazingly nutritious and healing by themselves, with vitamin A and beta carotene. Vitamin A overdosage on vitamin supplements and fish oils may prove fatal, this is not possible on vitamin A with carrots and it is good to ingest as much of the vitamin from the root crop. Beta-carotene is also a major antioxidant and helps maintain vision along with the fair share of lutein. Beta -carotene is good at maintaining epithelial tissue, the tissue surrounding internal organs which is susceptible to cancerous growth.

Carrots are also rich in poly-acetylene anti-oxidant falcarinol. Research at the University of Newcastle has shown carrot falcarinol destroys pre-cancerous cells in tumors and helps keep cancer away. A carrot is a deep soil root crop and this enables their roots for absorb an abundant array of minerals. They are also rich in other vitamins, including B vitamins and folates. Folate is the natural and safe source of folic acid. The list of nutrients gained from juicing carrots are unique synergy of its enzymes, vitamins, minerals, and flavonoids which provides an almost miraculous healing to some diseases when ingested well in our body’s system.

Drinking carrot juice cleanses and restores the liver which is our body’s master cleanser, without which we would die from internal toxic buildups. A healthy liver is proven to be an effective in cleansing our body from toxins. Carrot juice has been called the golden juice of healing so get a big bunch of carrots. Carrots store well in your refrigerator or cool cellar. Don’t store the juice this spoils or nutrients are broken down to an unusable form. Drink each freshly juiced batch immediately as often as your health needs. As your sweetener, you may you organic muscovado, unfiltered honey or juiced stevia herb if you cannot drink a carrot juice as is.

Aside from the healthy selection of carrot and tomato juice now available at the Museum Café, they also have two new selections of meals that is filling but would still appeal to the health conscious. With four selections well received last week, they are improved in taste and are still available for the foodies. The Museum Café has always maintained a strict compliances to using organic products and this attract a growing number of health conscious people who have been patronizing them. If you have not visited our Museum Café yet, do so next week to check out their interesting weekly food item which would surely catch fare well to your palate.

Roasted Anis Pork Belly with Tuba Sauce

We marinated a bacon slab for 4 days covered with anis seed. Left it in the oven on low temperature for ten hours and roasted glazed with honey. Sixteen liters fresh sparkling tuba were reduced until 0.5 liter concentrated as syrup, most beautiful in sour and sweet balance, creamy with hints of the tuba taste. Served with salad, bread of choice or organic brown rice.

Upo Filled with Ground Beef and Mixed Nuts

Oven baked Upo filled with a mix of nuts and ground beef. Served with fresh tomato sauce, salad and bread of choice or organic brown rice.

Classic Shrimp Cocktail

We only buy shrimps in the market when we see a few shrimps still moving, to be sure they are fresh. At home rinsed and directly in plenty boiling seawater: 35grams Bago Seasalt per liter water. The best and most original way to cook shrimps. A minute for small shrimps up to 3 mins. for big shrimps; just done. Quickly cooled down in our fridge and served as starters, cold with some lettuce and creamy cocktail sauce beefed up with a hint of brandy.

Grilled Beef Tenderloin with Green Peppercorn Sauce

Tenderloin from the Brahman Cow and creamy sauce with fresh green peppercorn, fresh version of black peppercorn, from Concepcion. We serve this ‘Tournedos au Poivre’ as main course with salad and choice of our bread varieties or organic brown rice.

Stingray in Coconut Wine Sauce

Rare in the market, but we could buy a fresh wing of a 1.50 cm diameter Sting Ray. We made fillets and from cuttings and bones a stock, added coconut milk and wine and reduced to saucy thickness. We served this Stingy Ray as main course with salads and your choice of our bread varieties or organic brown rice.

Grilled Tuna with Matured Green Tomato-Raisin Chutney

We found a nice fresh Yellow fin Tuna in the Talisay Market. Made fillets and grilled it. It comes with matured more than a year, green tomato-raisin chutney, a beautiful marriage of tastes. With organic brown rice and our rich salad.

Every serving is guaranteed freshly cooked on the café and is made with the freshest ingredients from the local market especially in Talisay City up north. Farmers bring in fresh produce from their farms to the markets early in the morning, just in time for mercado publico or public markets to open which is purchased for Museum Café use and brought fresh to the resident chef. Since ingredients are sourced locally, having selections from the Museum Café helps the local farmers earn from their products. Their food selections are good for lunch meals with organic rice while candle light dinners are best matched with different selections of bread.

If tomato or carrot juices are not up to your liking, there are freshly squeezed oranges or lime for you. Orange and lime are squeezed at the time you order and are not stored ones to ensure that vitamin C is kept intact. Lemonades and freshly brewed iced tea are also available for your liking. The Museum Café is open from Tuesdays to Sundays for lunch, merienda and dinner from 10 am to 10 pm. Whether you just came from work or finished touring Negros Museum, be sure to drop by anytime and you’ll be entertained by their kind staff. They also have a function room good for a maximum of sixty people for gatherings, meetings and small events.


Museum Café: Lovely Heart’s Day Specials


Valentine’s Day or for singles like me, Single Blessedness Day (formerly Singles Awareness Day), works as double-edged swords to people where to some it is a happy day, to some non-existent and to some others a dreadful day. Why should a single day of the year be so dreadful anyway if it can be celebrated in our own way? Certainly at Negros Museum’s Museum Café, there are thousand ways to celebrate this day with their lovely specials for the Hearts Day that is certainly good for your heart – literally. May it be with pairs or friends or just simply alone, these new selections and old improved ones certainly appeal to your organic, and healthy palate too.

Actually, Valentine’s Day is not limited to a day but is every day for those who love and enjoy life which the Museum Café believe so much. Nevertheless they had made extra-specials for you when you come to celebrate your loving feeling for one other with candles lighting up the table, or if you come as a group of friends, perhaps to affirm friendship and have a good times of talks and laughters.

CLASSIC SHRIMP COCKTAIL

We only buy shrimps in the market when we see a few shrimps still moving, to be sure they are fresh. At home rinsed and directly in plenty boiling ‘seawater’: 35 grams Bago sea salt per liter water. The best and most original way to cook shrimps. One minute for small shrimps up to 3 minutes for big shrimps; just done. Quickly cooled down in the fridge. Served as starter, cold with some lettuce and creamy cocktail sauce beefed up with a hint of brandy.

GRILLED BEEF TENDERLOIN IN GREEN PEPPERCORN SAUCE

Tenderloin from the Brahman Cow and creamy sauce with fresh green peppercorns (dried it will become black peppercorns) from Concepcion. We serve this ‘Tournedos au Poivre’ as main course with our salad and your choice of our bread varieties or organic brown rice.

STINGRAY IN COCONUT WINE SAUCE

Rare in the market, but we could buy a fresh wing of a 1.50 cm diameter Stingray. We made fillets and from the cuttings and bones a stock, added coconut milk and wine and reduced it to sauce thickness. We serve this Stingy Ray as main course with our salad and your choice of our bread varieties or organic brown rice.

MARANG ICE CREAM

We made the classical French Parfait-ice-cream mixed 1:1 with sweet ripe Marang. This is real fusion, East-meets-West in the tastiest way! This delicious fruit is not known in the Western world.

RAVIOLI CHEESE-ALOGBATI-PISTACHIO or GROUND PORK-FRESH BASIL-CELERY

One Raviolo, two and more Ravioli (plural) are a traditional type of Italian filled pasta. They are composed of a filling sealed between two layers of thin egg pasta dough and are served either in broth or with a sauce. The word ravioli is reminiscent of the Italian verb ‘riavvolgere’, ‘to wrap’. The earliest mention of ravioli appear in the writings of Francesco di Marco, a merchant of Venice in the 14th century. In Venice, the mid-14th century manuscript Libro per cuoco offers ravioli of green herbs blanched and minced, mixed with beaten egg and fresh cheese; we did the same: fresh Sagay cows milk cheese with alogbati, egg and added some pistachio nuts. The yellow Ravioli is fillet with ground pork, fresh organic basil and celery. We serve it as starter and as main course with cream-sauce and Parmesan cheese.

GRILLED TUNA with MATURED GREEN TOMATO-RAISIN CHUTNEY

We found a nice fresh Yellow fin Tuna in the Talisay Market. Made fillets and grill it for you. It comes with matured, more than a year, green tomato-raisin chutney, a beautiful marriage of tastes. With organic brown rice and our rich organic salad.

Selections for this week are some of the rarest but all native ingredients available in the local markets of Metro Bacólod, guaranteed in freshness daily. Unlike the previous weeks, a number of these are local recipes that some may find either so familiar or so exotic. Still included in the selections are the improved recipes featured from last week that will appeal more to classy palate in this season.

For those who want alcohol-free Valentines Day, you may opt for the naturally brewed tea made from certified organic tea leaves. It is good for this week’s cold spells and not to mention, available in its iced version too. Do away with the generic over sweetened ice tea for this is the real thing. Organic tea relaxes the body and would certainly add to the soothing feeling of being with some special for you. Coffee addicts can have coffee still with the selection of Batangas Coffee and a native brewed Buenos Aires Mountain Coffee while those who want to spice up the mood, they can opt for the Museum Café’s updated selections of wines and liquors just for you.