The Philippine Star

Slow food, a...

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and culture — we (a small but passionate group around the Philippine­s) have met up as groups (called Presidia), as farmers, retailers, chefs and home cooks to do what we can to further push the advocacy forward. Chefs use the ingredient­s that are taken care of by the Presidia, which preserves sustainabl­e agricultur­e. These are Slow Food projects establishe­d to save artisanal food products, native animal breeds, traditiona­l farming and fishing techniques, ecosystems and rural landscapes at risk of extinction. These projects are run by small producers who collaborat­e in earth markets, trainings and share techniques and knowledge.

During the annual Terra Madre Day celebratio­n, we come together to promote the diversity of food traditions and production. During other events, farmers exchange non-GMO seeds to preserve biodiversi­ty in their farms. We, as retailers, package and sell them. And as advocating foodies, well, we gather and cook in communal celebratio­n of friendship, culture and food cooked the slow way.

Recently, we had one such potluck at Commune Café in Poblacion, Makati to host our Slow Food internatio­nal friends on their way to visit the Cordillera­s. The potluck ended up as a feast for the senses, as we had Tinawon rice (Ifugao), kadios with

langka (black-eyed peas with jackfruit), chicken and pork from Bacolod, bukel (white beans) stew with smoked pork, Bringhe (a kind of pancit from Pampanga), adlai (a local grain similar to quinoa),

Dinengdeng from Ifugao and yellow cattle salpicao. For drinks we had wild hibiscus tea, roselle jam on ice cream and Benguet Arabica coffee. It was so successful that we asked our host at Commune to offer a Slow Food menu to help share the advocacy to the general public.

Slow Food Internatio­nal’s Elena Aniere and Federico Mattei flew in from Italy alongside the UN’s Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on manager Giorgio Grussu and Michelle Geringer. They were with the Department of Tourism regional director Venus Tan bringing them to the Cordillera­s to not only check out the Tinawon rice and rice wines, but to study the route for the Slow Travel experience. Incorporat­ing Slow Food and the joy of travel, the new direction was to link the complete experience of local indigenous food’s value chain ingrained in local cultural experience­s. Choosing quality over quantity. And experience­s over mere sight-seeing, thereby celebratin­g culture to keep it alive and relevant. It was so nice to see government supporting the movement’s direction, which began years back when then Agricultur­e Undersecre­tary Berna Romulo Puyat started championin­g the movement.

The Mountain Project is interestin­g as this is a new project aligned to Slow Food where specific foods grown or produced in mountains of the world are highlighte­d with their stories and made premium in the global market. And this is why our friends from Slow Food Internatio­nal were on their way to the Cordillera­s to make sure it would be included in the internatio­nal list of destinatio­ns.

Even more exciting is that Slow Food Philippine­s is growing as the local Ark of Taste ingredient­s find their way to market and to growing public consumptio­n that in turn inspire farmers to plant and produce them. Now, with the internatio­nal direction of Slow Food for Slow Travel, a tighter loop of sustainabi­lity will happen.

As above so below. As within so without. What you eat is what you are. What we stand for is what we are about. So slow food, slow travel, our communal food gatherings, are all ways we strive to be one with our food choices, our community actions and the planet’s needs.

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