Philippine Daily Inquirer

Crazy ideas find way onto plate in impromptu collab

- NINO ANGELO COMSTI Follow the author at @fooddudeph in Instagram.

ILinamnam’s Don Baldosano and Brae’s Jolo Morales of Melbourne improvised on a stunning dinner that might just become an annual event

t’s a dinner that was planned months ahead. Yet, the menu only materializ­ed a few hours before it was served. “We worked on the fly and tried to feel each other out,” says Don Baldosano of Linamnam, one of Manila’s busiest and sought after private dining.

“We just wanted to do it for fun,” adds Jolo Morales, who was on a 12-day holiday vacation from his kitchen work at Brae, one of Australia’s highly regarded and decorated restaurant­s.

Perhaps the dish that best represente­d the kind of unrehearse­d play that transpired that night was the one called Farm. Morales made a latik purée, then they added whatever the farmer brought them that afternoon to complete the course.

“We treated the greens in a such a way that there would be different textures and ways of cooking,” says Baldosano. “So I cooked the vegetables in high heat and left some raw. Then last minute, I saw some alimasag fat so I said, okay, let’s add another layer to the dish. I made a dressing out of that.”

Learning conversati­ons

The chefs have known each other for four years now, and though they have cooked dishes for Toyo Eatery (that’s where they met) as well as developed recipes for brands they consulted for, the two have never really worked together to produce a meal that combined their individual capacities and philosophi­es.

“Don has a good aura and I love connecting with people like him who has lots of energy and loves moving forward,” says Morales.

They would often exchange random and crazy ideas and more often than not, get varying ones, since their background­s are different. These were learning conversati­ons, not just about the craft but about each other, too.

This continued long after Morales moved to Melbourne, where he got to work in hatted restaurant­s and even joined the San Pellegrino Young Chef Academy, a cooking competitio­n in which he won. In 2021, his dish named Analogy, composed of roasted lechon pork belly, bagoong, pandan rice cracker, latik caramel and tamarind powder bested others, making him the Pacific region representa­tive.

Baldosano, on the other hand, earned his merit by opening his own restau progresran­t in Parañaque and presenting a sive Filipino menu unlike any other. It didn’t take long before Linamnam got in the radar of many people and became a hot spot.

Off the cuff

Even if both of them are busy tending to their own careers, they continue to find time every month to engage in hours-long calls to talk about their latest kitchen experiment­s, cookbook recommenda­tions and culinary discoverie­s. And when Morales was allowed to take a work leave for Christmas, the two knew that it was time to finally put everything they’ve discussed to plate.

They had a list of the items they wanted to champion per course, but as expected, a good number of them saw iterations in the process. Both went to Suki Market to purchase ducks and seafood, Quiapo for sakurab and palapa, and then to a dampa in Baclaran to find whatever on a whim. From there, they proceeded to the Linamnam kitchen to start working on their dishes.

The opener was served on toothbrush­es smeared with a latik paste, coagulated mixture of coconuts, and grated burnt coconut; followed by aged lapulapu in between crispy lumpia wrapper dabbed with wagyu fat and baked to a bronze. It was crowned with pipinito and edible flowers.

There was a bar of batwan

ice candy that made guests pucker up and awakened their senses, as well as sigarilyas dotted with patani beans cooked in coconut and turmeric and amplified with a palapa emulsion; followed by four seafood numbers: a mound of crab meat studded with pili nuts and puffed rice sitting on a pool of buttery broth seasoned by clams and caramelize­d bangus; squid two ways covered by

katuray flowers; aged pompano wrapped in torched adlaw

leaf and drenched in a chicken feet and wing jus; and oysters that have been lightly kissed by charcoal blanketed by wagyu fat and cream and topped with

alugbati leaves.

The farm, which put the spotlight on the fresh leaves coming from Den and Jean’s Natural Farm, was what the chefs considered to be the most spontaneou­s thing they did, while the wild honey-roasted duck was the most personal and sentimenta­l for them as it traced its roots to a Camarines Sur trip they had.

“At Caramoan, we saw a guy who kept on chewing on nganga and spitting it. His mouth turned red because of it,” remembers Baldosano. “Since then, Jolo has been bugging me to do a dish inspired by it.”

That memory was immortaliz­ed by shredded duck meat tucked underneath thick porridge and grilled sakurab , on a base of betel leaf. As a throwback to their experience, tobacco was torched table side for a smoky aroma and nicotine buzz.

“Sobrang ganda how we managed to interpret it,” says Morales. “It was the best dish for us. It was our favorite.”

The holiday break may be over but their constant exchange of ideas won’t. The monthly calls will continue in preparatio­n for next year’s collaborat­ion dinner, even if they themselves know that things will still change last minute.

 ?? ?? Crab with puffed rice and pili on a clam and caramelize­d “bangus” broth
Crab with puffed rice and pili on a clam and caramelize­d “bangus” broth
 ?? ??
 ?? ?? Chefs Don Baldosano and Jolo Morales
Chefs Don Baldosano and Jolo Morales
 ?? ?? Grilled oysters with wagyu fat and cream
Grilled oysters with wagyu fat and cream
 ?? ?? Aged “lapu-lapu” in between crispy “lumpia” wrappers
Aged “lapu-lapu” in between crispy “lumpia” wrappers
 ?? ?? Squid two ways on a blanket of “katuray” flowers
Squid two ways on a blanket of “katuray” flowers

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