Bulawan Floating Restaurant

Published on October 12, 2006 in the Life & Travel Section of Manila Standard Today

FIRST, a confession. I donÕt like ornamental foodÑthose made to look good to compensate for what they lack in flavor. I prefer real food. Real grubÑthe kind you can dig into and enjoy without ceremony. Just like allowing the senses to take in a panoramic view or listening to comforting music.

So, I chose a place that serves down-to-earth food for my first article in the Lifestyle Section of Manila Standard Today. It was intentionalÑI want to take you readers on a culinary experience that not only fills the tummy but the mind and soul as well. Let me take you to Pililla and Bulawan Floating Restaurant.

It was a weekday when a friend and I decided to drive to Pililla on a whim. It was drizzling on and off but that didnÕt stop me from taking photos through the windshield and window. Rizal is a picturesque provinceÑeven the carabao grazing on a field has a story to tell.

Bulawan Floating Restaurant, Manila East Road, Pililla, Rizal

We reached Bulawan at about 1 p.m. A few huts were occupied by small groups; a seminar (the Rizal Water District, we later found out) was ongoing in the main and largest hut. We chose a cozy hut, settled in, called a waiter and ordered lunch.

It wasnÕt my first visit to Bulawan. I was there over a year ago with my family and a group of friends after it was recommended by fellow bloggers Jay and Jet David. We only ordered halo-halo and drinks during that first visit since we already had lunch earlier in Tanay. The ambienceÑthe soothing waters and cool hutsÑhowever, was such that I promised myself there would be a next visit when I would sample their seafood specialties.

Bulawan Floating Restaurant sits in 1.2 hectares of fishpond. There is no restaurant building but, rather, huts of varying sizes erected a few inches above the water and interconnected by wooden foot bridges.

nipa huts erected above the water are interconnected by foot bridges

The day my friend and I drove to Bulawan, we decided we would have sinigang na kanduli sa miso and crispy dalag. Our choices may sound too familiar and ordinary but, for me, the restaurant only passes the test if it is able to successfully transform ordinary and familiar dishes into gastronomic delights. After the way Jet David raved about the food in Bulawan, I wanted to put the food to the test.

The sinigang na kanduli sa miso was to die for. Even I, who have been cooking for decades and have prepared sinigang in at least a dozen different ways, was impressed. I have also eaten sinigang in more than a dozen restaurants in different parts of Luzon and, I must say that BulawanÕs sinigang na kanduli sa miso is the best by far.

sinigang na kanduli sa miso

It has a lot to do with the quality of the fish. While so-so restaurants will often serve miniature kanduli no bigger than eight inches in length, Bulawan served us a large kanduli chopped into four portions. The fish was plump and had been properly cleaned without any trace of the mucus-like substance that envelopes its body. There is no unpleasant smell either. It was not overcooked (the part where many cooks fail)Ñit was tender and succulent but did not fall apart when an entire portion was lifted from the broth.

There was just enough mustasa (mustard leaves), siling haba (finger chilis) and slices of labanos (radish) to complement the fish but not overpower it. But the most memorable part of the dish was its broth. Thickish but without leaving the impression that one was sipping a sauce, it captured the flavor of the kanduli and had just the right balance between sourness and saltiness.

What about the crispy dalag? To start with, the wriggling live dalag was shown to us for approval before it went into the frying pan. We thought at first that it was much too large at 1.1 kilograms but, what the heck, it was late and didnÕt we drive all the way to Pililla for this?

deep fried crispy dalag (mudfish)

The fish was split open lengthwise, seasoned and deep-fried. A crisp golden crust formed on the entire surface while the meat inside remained soft and moist. Dipped in the traditional sawsawan of freshly-squeezed kalamansi juice, toyo and crushed siling labuyo, it was an experience I will remember for a long time and want repeated for many, many more times in the near future.

To complete the meal, we sipped fresh buko juice between mouthfuls. Not sweetened buko water with shredded meat in a glass but whole husks split open near the top with the meat untouched. After the meal, we scraped the buko meat from the husks with our spoons and enjoyed the sweet tenderness. Who needed dessert? The buko meat was a light and satisfying end to a perfect seafood meal.

We relaxed for a while then paid our bill. When the waiter brought our change, I asked for some background on Bulawan. Since he wasnÕt so sure when Bulawan was established, I asked if it would be possible to speak with the owner or manager.

The manager was also one of the two owners of Bulawan. Mrs. Nora Virrey arrived at our hut some minutes later. A few methodical questions elicited a story that made the place come even more alive before my eyes.

Nora and Joey Virrey, former OFWs and owners of Bulawan Floating Restaurant

Nora, a nurse, and Joey Virrey, an x-ray technician and physical therapist, left for Saudi Arabia in the 1980s aboard the same plane. They would not meet, however, and discover that the same plane brought them to Saudi, until they found themselves working in the same hospital. They married eventually and, in 1997, built the restaurant on the 1.2-hectare property that they initially leased. A true-to-life OFW success story.

Bulawan was built to be more than a restaurant. It was meant as a fish pond in the literal sense where guests can throw lines and catch the tilapia and hito that swim freely in the water. They can choose to bring home their catch for P80.00 per kilo or have the fish cooked, served and enjoyed as a Bulawan meal.

Fishpond

Today, fishing activities take a back seat as the planned renovations, expected to be completed within a few months, are given priority. Hopefully, by December when the sale to the Virreys of the property on which Bulawan sits is complete, I will go back with my family. Perhaps, we can try to catch some tilapia and hito, have them cooked, lay back, savor the view and the ambience, enjoy the food and each otherÕs company, then go home feeling good that there are gems like BulawanÑunabashedly and proudly Filipino. 





Comments

  1. ricky says:

    have heard a lot about the place. could u give directions on how to go there? i plan to bring my balikbayan friends there. thanks.

  2. Heidi P. Cruz says:

    Hi, Atty. Veneracion, I purposely looked for a way to email you because I wanted to share something with you that you might want to mention in your writings.  I chanced upon The Sassy Lawyer last year in a bid to look for another Filipino vegetarian (I am one), and have since been coming back to it from time to time.

    Imagine my surprise to find out that you have been to Bulawan, a favorite hangout for myself and my two nephews (who love fishing), which is just a town away from Jalajala, Rizal, the place I wanted to write you about.

    Yesterday (All Saints’ Day), at the cemetery, I was able to sample very fine organic chocolate milk made from carabao’s milk, which tastes infinitely better than commercially produced cow’s milk.  Their fresh milk, which I also sampled, was very good, too.  The dairy is being produced by a farmers’ cooperative through the leadership and guidance of their president, Mr. Roxane T. Halili (who was peddling the milk, too–that’s how much he believes in their products).  Mr. Halili is a UP Los Banos-trained dairy farmer, and worked for a long time with Carnation, and for a dairy farm in Saudi Arabia.

    Organic carabao’s milk is healthier than any milk or dairy product you can find on grocery shelves, which are made from big-farm cow’s milk, from cows which are fed all sorts of hormones and anti-biotics that find their way into one’s food.  Maybe it’s worth your time to try it, and enjoy a scenic drive along one of Rizal’s most beautiful coastal towns, on concrete roads made some years ago by the JICA.  I think Mr. Halili lives in barrio Llano or Bayogo.

    I hope that you can help the farmers promote their milk and dairy products (they also have pastillas but I didn’t sample it because I was avoiding too much sugar).  It would be such a waste if their project isn’t able to take off; something so healthful and delicious (as well as with noble intentions) deserves some push.  Ang galing kasi ng Pinoy!

    Thank you so much in advance.

    Heidi P. Cruz (a panyera since 1999)

  3. Connie says:

    ricky, manila east road (national highway), pililla, somewhere near km 59. go by way of antipolo, then on to teresa, tanay… pililla.

    Heidi, wow, I wonder if you have read my older entries about UPLB’s DTRI–how I rave about the dairy products. I do love promoting local dairy products primarily because I hate being dependent on imported items hehehe

    I would love to try the chocolate milk. If I can have more details where exactly in Jalajala I should go to… it’s really not that far and I’d love to go. Thanks.

  4. Heidi P. Cruz says:

    Hi, Atty., sorry for responding so late; I had been very busy lately and was unable to check back until today.  I heard from Mr. Halili that the processing station is temporarily housed in the “private high school” and that it is in Sitio Llano, Barangay Bayugo. It is difficult to lose your way in Jalajala because it’s just one major road throughout, and everybody seems to know everybody.  I do have Mr. Halili’s cellphone number, though, 0906-506-0137.

    Thanks so much, and I hope you enjoy your trip (I enjoy mine every time I go there–I learned to drive in that area).

  5. angel says:

    hi. id love to try bulawan. i was wondering how much your lunch was? so i can prepare my budget before going there.. thanks!

  6. Connie says:

    Thanks, Heidi. I’ll get in touch with him.

    A little over 500 pesos, Angel.

  7. Heidi P. Cruz says:

    I read in one announcement that the cooperative will be featured in an exhibit sponsored by the DAR and the DTI from November 25-26.  I hope you can meet Mr. Halili there, if you have time.  Thanks!

  8. Connie says:

    I’ll contact him over the weekend to ask for details. But what I’d really love is to see his actual place.