Manila Bulletin

LEYTE’S FIRST GINGER CANDY AVAILABLE SOON NATIONWIDE

- By MINERVA BC NEWMAN (Photos by OPAV.)

The municipali­ty of Javier in Leyte has produced its firstever ginger candy now available nationwide through a restaurant chain market after the experts from the Department of Science and Technology in Leyte (DOSTLeyte) tested the candy formulatio­n that uses freshly extracted ginger juice to be ready for the market.

According to the DOST-Leyte and the local government of Javier, the soothing benefits of ginger candy will be distribute­d to the more than 700 Andoks restaurant branches nationwide.

“The new product was conceptual­ized to create additional demand for the locally grown ginger,” according to Asec. Anthony Gerard Gonzales

of the Office of the Presidenti­al Assistant for the Visayas (OPAV) during a recentLagi­ng Handa Network Briefing.

Gonzales said that the project is expected to generate more income for the farmers in the locality. DOST-Leyte’s first community-based project with the town of Javier was salabat processing, with ginger as a traditiona­lly local remedy for sore throat of most Filipinos.

The salabat is now branded as “Javier Salabat” with packaging designed by the Packaging Technology Division of DOST-Industrial Technology Developmen­t Institute (DOST-ITDI). It is available through all Andoks outlets nationwide.

The goal of the local government of Javier and DOST is to promote ginger candy as an excellent alternativ­e to imported ginger candies and to promote entreprene­urship in the countrysid­e, Gonzales added.

Meanwhile, DOST-Leyte project is also beefing up the coco vinegar production for the Bung-aw Women Associatio­n in Hilongos, Leyte, and it has conducted technical training to 34 participan­ts composed of members of the associatio­n, the Department of Social Welfare and Developmen­t (DSWD), and Hilongos local government.

The technology developed by DOST through its ITDI aims to ensure consistent quality for the product and fast track the production time to a daily harvest after 15 days of gestation period. “Under the traditiona­l method, it would take weeks or even months to process coconut vinegar,” Gonzales said.

The DOST-assisted technology does not entail the use of synthetic chemicals. It harnesses the science behind the fermentati­on process by using a mechanical method.

Since consumers are getting more aware of the dangers of consuming vinegar made from synthetic materials, DOST-Leyte is confident that natural coconut vinegar will once again be the choice condiment of Filipinos nationwide.

The project is expected to generate more income for the farmers in the locality. DOSTLeyte’s first community-based project with the town of Javier was salabat processing, with ginger as a traditiona­lly local remedy for sore throat of most Filipinos.

 ??  ?? SWEET TECH DOST-funded candy making machine
SWEET TECH DOST-funded candy making machine
 ??  ?? FINISHED PRODUCT Ginger candies made all natural with freshly extracted ginger juice
FINISHED PRODUCT Ginger candies made all natural with freshly extracted ginger juice

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