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A Toyo-trained young chef opens his home for 16-course private dinners

In case you need more proof that Filipino cuisine is thriving and definitely far from the bland and boring sort others have accused it of, here’s a good start: a 16-course tasting menu at Linamnam.

Though the menu changes weekly according to seasonality and market availability of ingredients, the dishes fall into four basic categories: appetizers, seafood, mains, and dessert.

The influences are clear the very moment the dishes come out of Don Baldosano’s open “kitchen” (actually located in his home garden). Having trained at chef Jordy Navarra’s Toyo Eatery and with Locavor’s chef Mikel Zaguirre, Baldosano’s creativity and playfulness in presenting Filipino flavors is evident in each of his 16 plates.

The private dinner is hosted at Don Baldosano’s own garden at home.
Kabibi—reminiscent of the sea where the clams are from, the dish is served on rocks, with a side of chili leaf mimicking seaweed

Take the Lupa, which is a take on the classic potato onion soup, but using ube and garlic, topped with bits of fermented mushroom and green onions. Or the Boodle—the main course served on a banana leaf—which has pork and ensaladang talong served over palapa (dark rice cooked with toasted shredded coconut as is staple in Maranao cuisine).

A shrimp trio: lasing na hipon, truffle pancit, and okoy
Lupa—an ube and garlic cold soup meant to be a local take on the potato onion soup
Don Baldosano, who is currently a student at Enderun, has trained at Toyo Eatery and Locavore

Even desserts get the same creative treatment. The Maja Blanca, for example, looks more like the street favorite turon. But once you bite through the crispy thin, mildly sweet lumpia wrapper, you get to the namesake coconut-based kakanin.

The main course is named after and inspired by the boodle fight. Served on a banana leaf, pork and ensalada top palapa rice (a Maranao dish which has dark rice cooked with toasted shredded coconut)
It looks like turon, but it’s actually maja blanca enveloped by lumpia wrapper
Their coffee is infused with ginger and anise, and served with cookies topped with coconut and caramel

Although presented in small plates like your classic fine dining restaurant, it’s the literal homey vibe of Linamnam paired with the familiarity of its flavors that make this a more approachable private dining experience.

 

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