Gilbey's Premium Strength is currently my bottled drink of choice. A clear, light drink with a sweet, citrusy taste, it has the nice, smooth buzz from light beer without the bloated feeling.
Just saying.
Wednesday, August 25, 2010
Saturday, August 14, 2010
John & Yoko
Last night, we went out for dinner and a drink at John & Yoko, Greenbelt 5. I have been there a couple of times but it's the first time that I tried their Vodka Lychee. For P118 a pop, it's quite good.
Note on the Dinner: The salmon sashimi was okay. The Seafood Shabu-Shabu was a feast if ordered just for two (I believe this can be split among four people). The place, as always, was busy although we arrived quite early for dinner and was able to talk without having to raise our voices, if only for a while.
Saturday, August 7, 2010
TGIF's Mojitos
Went to TGIF at Trinoma, a convenient location for peope who think MRT is a gift from heaven (like I do!) I think their Ball Park Nachos is a version of unconventional pulutan because of the sheer volume as seen in the photo (okay, so that's my niece. And no, she did not finish that).
1 Mojito
1 Mojito Apple
1 Ball Park Nachos
Price: Php 736.61 (excluding service charge)
I liked the original mojito more than the apple one. But for Php 174.11 a glass, I just had to find out how to make one.
From Taste of Cuba:
1 teaspoon powdered sugar
Juice from 1 lime (2 ounces)
4 mint leaves
1 sprig of mint
White Rum (2 ounces)
2 ounces club soda
Place the mint leaves into a long mojito glass (often called a "collins" glass) and squeeze the juice from a cut lime over it. You'll want about two ounces of lime juice, so it may not require all of the juice from a single lime. Add the powdered sugar, then gently smash the mint into the lime juice and sugar with a muddler (a long wooden device pictured below, though you can also use the back of a fork or spoon if one isn't available). Add ice (preferably crushed) then add the rum and stir, and top off with the club soda (you can also stir the club soda in as per your taste). Garnish with a mint sprig.
So in the end, I probably don't need a mint sprig.
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