Philippine Daily Inquirer

MIKO CALO MOVES ON FROM METRONOME

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this whole idea of a chef being a diva ... If you really are a mature person, you don’t throw a tantrum. You don’t get your perfect world, though. You move on ... You need to strike the balance of protecting yourself and protecting the people around you.

“And it took me a while to actually learn that because, you know, as a woman, as a Filipina, you’re always told to accommodat­e. This is not a tantrum that I’m throwing. It’s a decision that I have to make as a business owner and also as a chef who has to set boundaries.”

Even industry insiders were shocked to hear the news of Calo leaving. After all, her name has always been synonymous with Metronome. “They’re shocked but supportive ... I’m lucky to be a part of a community that is very supportive in a very cutthroat industry. We look out for each other. There’s that kind of camaraderi­e and that kind of bond. We know what we go through every day.”

‘Serendipit­ous’

Calo becoming a chef was “serendipit­ous,” she believes.

Failing to make it into her dream university, she ended up going to St. Scholastic­a’s College Manila. “They said, ‘You have bad grades so this is what we can offer you—a certificat­e course in HRM (Hotel and Restaurant Management).’ I hated it. I hated the fact that I was in an all-girls school again.”

But during lab classes, she had an epiphany: “You can do this for a living? I had no idea that it was a career possibilit­y. I got excited ... This is what I’m gonna do for the rest of my life. I was very lucky to have found that very early on.”

Calo loves everything about being a chef. “I don’t cook with my brain. I cook with feeling and emotion. I love how it makes people feel when they get fed. I also love that it’s a tough, tough situation that you put yourself in. I guess I thrive in that kind of hardship.”

Food was always a big part of her life. Calo grew up in Butuan, in a family where food was always important. At 9, she learned how to gut and clean fish. At 10, she was in charge of cooking vegetable dishes.

Her aunt, the late TV host and perennial traveler Susan Calo-Medina, who she lived with when she moved to Manila to attend high school at Assumption College, played a role in developing her palate. “She was the one who introduced me to the finer things, brought us to restaurant­s, taught us how to appreciate good ingredient­s ... We would travel with her or she’d bring back food from different places. I was always surrounded by food, our heritage, but at the same time, also being told that there’s a bigger world out there.”

Calo conquered that bigger world, graduating at the top of her class at the prestigiou­s Ferrandi Paris and getting an internship at La Table de Joël Robuchon.

“I always knew I wanted to work with Joël Robuchon. Before I even started culinary school, when I visited my family in London, we ate in La Cuisine de Joël Robuchon and I actually told my cousin, ‘I’m going to work here.’ The way he was making food was super brilliant. It’s so simple but it’s not.”

She would spend the next seven years working in Joël Robuchon restaurant­s in Paris and London before becoming the junior sous chef at L’Atelier de Joël Robuchon and Restaurant Joël Robuchon in Singapore.

Then, she returned to the Philippine­s and opened Metronome. “It was very exciting for me. I was also very scared because I was this new person in the industry. I was away for a long time. This was my first business. I feel very lucky to have been able to meet the partners that I have and them being so generous with their support and belief in what I can do. Having them see the talent and see the potential, I’m very grateful for that. I’ll forever be grateful for that.”

She added, “I’m not being ungrateful for stepping away and setting my boundaries. I just want to move on. I wish everyone well.”

‘A great education’

Calo calls Metronome “a great education.” “It was like going to graduate school, because I opened new concepts within the space. It’s also like I did an MBA on how to make a business survive a pandemic. It’s a huge learning experience. Every minute of what I poured into Metronome I loved, and it was out of the sheer love and passion for what I wanted to do.”

She was named 2022 Chef of the Year by the Philippine Tatler Dining Awards, while Metronome’s accolades include the 2020 Best New Restaurant Award from the Philippine Tatler Dining Awards and making it to Asia’s 50 Best Restaurant­s’ 50 Best Discovery list.

One of Calo’s Metronome highlights? Getting to work with three of Asia’s Best Female Chefs—Pichaya “Pam” Soontornya­nakij from Bangkok, Johanne Siy from Singapore, and

Margarita Forés, who Calo has always looked up to. “That for me was a privilege because I know how important representa­tion is. ”

How has Metronome changed her as a chef? “It really helped me mature. I am starting to understand how to balance creativity and business, between being authentic to myself and being relevant as well. It’s almost like a rite of passage from being a cook to being a chef patron. This also taught me how to value myself more, that as a creative you put something intangible to the table.”

She may be leaving Metronome’s kitchen but she’s still a partner—she still has shares in the restaurant. When asked what she wishes for the restaurant, she said, “I hope that it will continue on as a business ... I really don’t know what their plans are. But I hope it thrives because there are people there who need the livelihood.”

Elbert Cuenca, president and CEO of Metronome French Restaurant Inc., told Lifestyle, “The partners are committed to continuing on with the restaurant. We are strategizi­ng and working on plans for the future of Metronome but for now, it’s status quo. It might be Metronome forever or it might be something else later on.”

They are looking for a new executive chef for Metronome.

What would Calo like to tell Metronome’s next chef? “Make it their own. They don’t need to continue what I’ve started. It’s not gonna hurt my ego. They can even change the name if it doesn’t ring true to them.”

Today, her first day after leaving Metronome, Calo will be doing something she hasn’t done in what feels like forever. “I’m going to stay in bed for as long as I can. Because that is a luxury that I haven’t had ever since I started working in Joël Robuchon—the luxury of having time for myself, especially in the last five years.”

And then, it’s back to work. Calo is doing a fundraisin­g dinner for an organizati­on that provides scholarshi­ps for women. She’s in talks for more collaborat­ions with other chefs. She’s also planning to open her own place, one that’s “more authentica­lly me, that reflects my heritage, my life experience­s, my skill, my background. It will reflect me, not just what I can do. The when and where, that’s still up in the air.”

To fans of her food who might be looking for her at Metronome, she has this to say: “I’m very sorry. But I’m not going to disappear. This is not the end, it’s just the beginning.”

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