The subject line had been drafted some months ago, but I never had the time to actually post about this subject. Heck I have not had the time to post anything period.
Still none now, except to maybe post this photo of Buffy's buffalo milk and ice cream store's porch wall*. No direct connection to the subject other than Buffy's being located in bgy. Lumil, Silang, Cavite (on the road to Tagaytay), and my childhood fascination with bamboo and interior design, added to the interest in cottage/flea market/vintage coming together in this place.
Buffy's sells fresh carabao milk and really delicious carabao's milk ice cream. They also have pastillas de leche ...one of the best I have tasted. I have made my own pastillas using carabao's milk and I love my own, but I bought theirs rather than mix up a batch. Again, I have little time (or poor management of it), and if you know how to make pastillas, you know how long and how much arm muscle it takes.
Back to the porch wall, and Buffy's interiors in general. I especially noted today, that Buffy's Lutong Bahay Filipino restaurant on the second floor actually is able to combine style elements I have had percolating for some time. That is...
...it has their basic white, white wooden tables and benches, picket fence, farmhouse, cottage, dairy look...but upstairs, bamboo-lined walls, Filipino windows, and bamboo vases on the same white wood tables and chairs.
The only thing I'm not sure about is the plastic greenery, flowers, and random little plastic birds lining the walls...but really, they're consistent all over, that I can overlook the fact that I prefer real leaves and flowers.
It gives the place a lot of originality anyway, and hey, less upkeep all around!
Their flourescent light bulbs are bordered by bamboo, too.
I've always felt it seemed a quaint place to take little children for ice cream...
Now I see how I might be able to achieve those two design elements after all---whitewashed cottage and natural color bamboo/native materials. It is doable.
Their milk and ice cream are enough for a stopover or ultimate destination. But it is nice that the owners still took care to make the place pretty too.
* Those birdhouses? They are sold along the road to Tagaytay too by one seller...
koi
I'm just a small fish in a small corner of this big Laguna, and this is how I've been swimming it
Showing posts with label milk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label milk. Show all posts
21 September, 2014
26 November, 2012
Beacon Academy
Ahh! So conducive to learning! Set against a mountain, this high school is. And as with many of the new, good schools adding a ''branch" or relocating South (of Metro Manila), this one is never really far from where people live. In this area of Santa Rosa, that is. When I say "not far" I actually mean the drives are pleasant. No traffic jams, no smog, greens along the road...various bird species on the trees (and well, okay, the wires).
I hope these children know how fortunate they are. When I hear of others trapped in EDSA or C5 or wherever, going from school in Makati to home in Quezon City or vice versa, I feel sorry. Even sitting as passengers in private cars, their daily travel to and from school can be a stressor. And then the kids and teens focus on tablets sitting in traffic in the car...
That is another story, maybe for the Mother blog where I talk about how now the kid dislikes flavored milk "because it's too sweet for my tongue". Among other things natural, unrefined, pure and maybe organic...
12 November, 2011
Stamps, the friendly Barangay Post Office, and going postal
I still enjoy sending and receiving "snail" mail. Luckily, I still have one (come to think of it just ONE) friend who regularly sends me something on my birthday every year, and on Christmas, even if she is Thai and doesn't really celebrate Christmas the way we do. She is a stamp collector. Along with a pack of Nestle Thai iced milk tea powder sachets, a present such as bags shirts, or whatever she can send that doesn't cost more than 500 baht to send by mail, are sets of postage stamps. BEAUTIFUL Thai stamps. Sadly, I am not into philately, though I admire and have cherished all the stamps she has sent me through the years. I keep the envelopes too. I really have to set up some webpage and scan everything to show them!
The very last time I had to pick up my parcel from Thailand at the MCPO (Makati City Post Office) on Buendia, I gave away a set of those stamps. Actually, I think it was the envelope I gave to the post man. He was nice anyway, and remembered that I had been coming to pick up the same kind of parcel with gorgeous stamps inside. Besides, he was a true collector and was shy to say so. Of course I could share.
What saddens me is I have not been able to truly share, to return the favor, to my Thai friend. I have sent her some of our stamps, I have even given her this book about Philippine stamps by the late Reynaldo G. Alejandro (may his soul rest in peace). But I cannot match the stamps she sends me. Ours just pale, pale pale in comparison. I'm not too proud to send them. Often, I read press releases about commemorative stamps I would like to own and send to her. I have not been successful in purchasing any of these, as I could not travel to the main post office in Manila.
At the MCPO, there is a department upstairs from which to purchase the stamps. I did get to buy a few, but they did not have the stamps advertised.
It was always disappointing. Even if the designs had potential or were significant to me, the printing was not as nice as my Thai ones.
Anyway, I have listed my mailing address as one in Paranaque now, and not this one in Sta. Rosa. I consider it 'safer' in a sense, because then I would not have to go to the bayan to pick up registered mail. Also, I notice that I only saw the Philpost van twice in here, and that was on our first year. I even spoke to the mail men (because call me postal but I love the idea of mail, post, and stamps, really.), who said they actually deliver registered mail instead of waiting for us to pick them up. I then learned where the nearest post office in Barangay Don Jose is. It is just at gate 2 of the Laguna Technopark, at the pedestrian entrance.
Once, I intentionally mailed something, for my toddler to experience the whole post office thing. It turns out this little post office room is manned by one interesting lady, but then you can never tell if it's going to be open or shut for the day. Or some days, half the day. The friendly security guard will tell you the various reasons, too. When we finally got lucky, we met the postal lady, who is interesting because of her accessories. She matches her outfits with bangles, necklaces and earrings of similar print/color. On our first day, it was animal prints, and the other, wooden beads in summer limes and yellow to match her green outfit. I complimented her.
So now my toddler has this impression that the lady who takes your letter to lola is fashion-conscious. Really, the accessories did a lot to perk us up (and I'm sure her), in the little roomful of mail to sort.
I still cannot obtain commemorative stamps from her though. I wanted the John Paul II one, but she said I would have to go to the main office in the bayan, or really, in Manila. My compliment got me a friendly response, but didn't get me the stamps.
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