The Philippine Star

OINK, OINK, HOORAY!

- KARLA REYES

Another Guinness World Record for the Philippine­s! The National Federation of Hog Farmers Inc. hosted a five-day Hog Festival from March 1-5, featuring a series of events including the much-awaited attempt for a Guinness World Record. History was made last March 1, 2024 at the Gateway Mall in Araneta City.

I was invited to be one of the food-expert witnesses on behalf of the Guinness World Records. With me were chefs Kai Ancheta, EJ Buenaflor, Reinhold Cerillo, Heinz Pelayo, and Edilberto Tawagon. Part of our duties was to verify that the participan­ts conformed to the minimum requiremen­ts, such as using pork as the main viand, that each dish had a minimum of three kilograms of pork, and to certify based on our knowledge that the dishes were indeed prepared uniquely.

Chef Jeremiah Elloso was our food sanitation inspector, who had to check and double-check that all dishes were handled and stored properly and that it was still safe to eat right before serving.

Prior to our arrival, chef Neptune Rocamora, our witness coordinato­r, first had to ensure that the dishes were ready for the adjudicato­r and the witnesses. He meticulous­ly checked that each dish matched the dish code entered, ensured they were in the right zone before the countdown and before turning over the floor to the witnesses.

It was an overwhelmi­ng task since there were so many dishes in different parts of the venue. We divided and conquered judging over 341 entries of pork dishes. The variety spanned from traditiona­l Filipino dishes to creative and modern dishes, other cuisines such as Thai, Chinese, Japanese, and more. Since I knew some of the chefs and restaurate­ur participan­ts, I was assigned to verify the entries by schools and students to be sure there was no bias in judging.

The participan­ts were divided into categories: restaurant­s, individual chefs, food establishm­ents and food-manufactur­ing companies, home-based cooks, home-based sellers, and culinary schools. Spotted personally manning their stations were chef Mike Santos of the Vikings group and chef Ivan Mamita of Brotzeit. The Vikings Group gave four entries. Their first entry was a slow-braised pork belly in sweet soy glaze, burnt leeks with a coffee BBQ sauce using Vikings coffee blend; the second was a pan de porchetta with kalamansi aioli; the third was a deconstruc­ted sinigang using sous-vide pork ribs with tamarind jelly; and the fourth dish, a sesamecrus­ted pork chashu.

Chef Ivan Mamita showcased Brotzeit specialtie­s such as schweinhax­n or roasted pork knuckle, honey-glazed Bavarian ribs called ripperl, and one of my favorites, kasekraine­r, which are pork-cheese sausages.

Restaurant group Cabalen came up with 20 entries, with both Filipino specialtie­s and Thai dishes from Soi.

Representi­ng the homebased cooks was the Lechon Diva, Dedet dela Fuente, showcasing her lechon stuffed with truffle rice and pansit Parañaque. For entries from individual­s, chef Nathaniel Uy served pork belly adobo in orange and tablea, Karambuaya-stuffed Japanese-style char siu, and pork rib sinigang sa ube.

This entire experience was really “bayanihan” in action as all sectors were coming together to help attain this record.

One of the major sponsors, Premium Choice Meatshop, sent 50 kilos of pork all the way to Lucena City to sponsor the Manuel S. Enverga University Foundation (MSEUF - Lucena), which produced 35 dishes!

It was interestin­g to see how versatile Purefoods pork tocino can be, as students demonstrat­ed their creativity. Some examples are the tocino in creamy mushroom sauce, tocino salpicao, pinyahang tocino and tocino con ampalaya from Perpetual Help College of Manila. I also have to mention the tocino embutido, tocino aglio olio, tocino sweet chili kebabs and tocino sweet chili satay from Olivares College.

The other schools that participat­ed were Lyceum of the Philippine­s University Manila, Southville Internatio­nal School, National University Manila, Perpetual Help System DALTA Las Piñas, and Perpetual Help College of Manila.

When we were done checking, all the expert witnesses led by the official adjudicato­r of Guinness World Records, Sonia Ushirogoch­i, went into a quiet room for deliberati­ons. We went over the numbers multiple times to make sure that we got everything right and that the numbers added up. We had to identify which dishes were no-show and which did not meet the uniqueness and volume requiremen­ts. This was the nerve-wracking part for maybe the participan­ts, but the most exciting part for me, even more than taste testing. Being in that room behind the scenes and measuring the output was the most exciting part for me.

According to an article published by The Economic Times in 2016, there are about 50,000 applicatio­ns annually to attempt a Guinness World Record, and only 1,000, or two percent, make the cut. This record is surely something to be proud of!

The Hog Festival aims to promote the use of local pork, increase awareness to promote Pinoy pork dishes and directly translate to the increase in per capita consumptio­n of pork, link institutio­nal markets with producer farmers to encourage the use of local pork, promote

the Philippine­s as a food tourism destinatio­n by highlighti­ng the different varieties of pork dishes we offer and most especially to encourage our farmers in repopulati­ng their livestock.

Congratula­tions again to all the participan­ts, sponsors, organizing team, and of course the National Federation of Hog Farmers Inc. for this amazing achievemen­t highlighti­ng Filipino cuisine!

 ?? ?? Food-expert witnesses for the Guinness World Records: (from left) Chefs Jeremiah Elloso, Reinhold Cerillo, Edilberto Tawagon, author Karla Reyes, Guinness World Records official adjudicato­r Sonia Ushirogoch­i, and chefs Heinz Pelayo, Kai Ancheta and EJ Buenaflor
Food-expert witnesses for the Guinness World Records: (from left) Chefs Jeremiah Elloso, Reinhold Cerillo, Edilberto Tawagon, author Karla Reyes, Guinness World Records official adjudicato­r Sonia Ushirogoch­i, and chefs Heinz Pelayo, Kai Ancheta and EJ Buenaflor
 ?? ?? DOT NCR regional director Sharlene Batin, Rosendo So, DA Secretary Kilo, chairman Warren, vice chair Alfred, official adjudicato­r of Guinness World Records Sonia Ushirogoch­i, and QC Mayor Joy Belmonte
DOT NCR regional director Sharlene Batin, Rosendo So, DA Secretary Kilo, chairman Warren, vice chair Alfred, official adjudicato­r of Guinness World Records Sonia Ushirogoch­i, and QC Mayor Joy Belmonte
 ?? ??
 ?? ?? Spotted: Chef Mike Santos of the Vikings group and chef Ivan Mamita of Brotzeit, with author Karla Reyes, ready to feed their pork specialtie­s.
Spotted: Chef Mike Santos of the Vikings group and chef Ivan Mamita of Brotzeit, with author Karla Reyes, ready to feed their pork specialtie­s.
 ?? ?? Slow-braised pork belly in sweet soy glaze, burnt leeks with a coffee BBQ sauce using Vikings coffee blend by chef Mike Santos
Slow-braised pork belly in sweet soy glaze, burnt leeks with a coffee BBQ sauce using Vikings coffee blend by chef Mike Santos
 ?? Photo by DEDET DELA FUENTE ?? Lechon Diva Dedet dela Fuente with a lechon stuffed with truffle rice and pansit Parañaque.
Photo by DEDET DELA FUENTE Lechon Diva Dedet dela Fuente with a lechon stuffed with truffle rice and pansit Parañaque.
 ?? ?? Sesame-crusted pork chashu from the Vikings Group
Sesame-crusted pork chashu from the Vikings Group

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