Disclaimer: By posting on this web site it is accepted that you have agreed to our Terms. Please DO NOT publish copyrighted material/pictures without the owner’s permission, you are liable for any costs incurred.


Results 1 to 7 of 7
  1. #1
    Moderator
    Join Date
    Aug 2010
    Location
    Marikina City
    Posts
    26,785
    Rep Power
    150

    Cool Distilling the Filipino ‘spirit

    The Filipino lambanog is going global, and the Philippine Distillers Company (PDC) is hoping it will soon find itself alongside the world’s best known and most distinctive liquors.

    On October 8, a modern, more scientifically distilled version of the truly Filipino alcoholic beverage will be presented in suitably posh surroundings—Salon de Ning of the Manila Peninsula. And it will be introduced for what it truly is—not as the local version of the Russian vodka but as a true product of Filipino ingenuity and indigenous material.

    Anthony Manguiat, chief executive officer of PDC, a boutique enterprise by industrial standards, says their product is “something you will never find anywhere else,” a distillation of “the true Filipino spirit,” literally and figuratively.



    The small group behind the enterprise carries further the allusion to the essence of the Filipino by calling its product Lakan, an ancient title of nobility. Manguiat says it is a title bestowed on a “warrior ruler, symbolizing both character and strength of the Filipino.”

    He says Lakan is more than just an attempt to raise the quality of lambanog and elevate it to world-class standards. The initiative is also meant to promote the entrepreneurial spirit among coconut growers, giving them alternatives to the traditional but no longer profitable copra (dried coconut meat used for extracting cooking oil and other food products) production.

    At present, he says, a hectare planted to about 100 trees will yield some 1,000 kilos of copra in one year. At P30 per kilo, the farmer/owner gets only P30,000 a year.
    “Just enough to pay the real estate tax,” Manguiat says of the paltry amount.

    PDC allows coconut farmers use of their plantations to help raise their incomes.

    The farmers can set aside a portion of the farmland just for tuba (PDC calls it coconut nectar) extraction, Manguiat says. The distillery will buy the coco nectar harvested from a hectare of trees at P300,000 for one year.

    “That’s almost P30,000 a month,” or about the same as what the farmers will get in one year from selling copra, he says.

    PDC has identified up to 70 farmer cooperators from where it can source the raw materials.

    Manguiat says each hectare is farmed by three to four families, so the indirect beneficiaries may number at least 100 people.

    The distillery, says Manguiat, is capable of producing in a month 10,000 bottles, each containing 750 milliliters.

    The company has not reached its full capacity yet, as it currently produces only up to 7,000 bottles.

    But he does not think lambanog-making will become a mass production enterprise. Those who have tasted tuba will agree with him when he says that “coco nectar has to be distilled immediately.”

    Highly perishable, tuba starts fermenting right away, and will turn into vinegar just hours after it is harvested.

    So PDC, based in Lipa City, Batangas, sources its raw materials from plantations closest to it—in Quezon and Marinduque.
    “If we want to do more, we will have to set up plants where the source (of) coco nectar is,” Manguiat says. This means expansion will involve having distilleries in the Visayas and Mindanao.

    Despite past and recent threats of coconut pests and natural calamities that devastate plantations annually, Manguiat is confident the initiative will be sustained, as the tree grows in almost 90 percent of the country.

    The “inventor” of the new lambanog aspiring for global recognition is Lawrence G. Lim, who has 10 years of experience distilling the spirit behind him.
    Lim says what makes the product different and better than the traditional “brew” is the “multiple distilling/multi-stage process.”
    He used all those 10 years “to study and improve continuously the traditional lambanog to a very high degree of quality/purity comparable to the best the world has to offer.”
    Lim says that the traditional lambanog business “remains a backyard industry to this day, not geared to compete in the international market” in terms of quality and quantity.
    But Philippine Craft Distillers Inc. “has transformed the traditional lambanog into a premium spirit through its craft distillation process,” he adds.

    As to why lambanog does not, as yet, grace ceremonial events, like state dinners where the basi, a product from northern Philippines, takes center stage, Lim explains that “ceremonial occasions usually use wine for toasting.”
    Basi, he adds, “is a traditional Philippine wine made from sugar cane; lambanog is a distilled spirit or liquor.”

    Manguiat hopes Filipinos, especially those living and working abroad, will take pride in the new, improved lambanog—enough to give it away as presents or pasalubong and to mark special occasions. He also hopes foreigners will find it a good takeaway to remind them of their visit to the Philippines.

    Source


  2. #2
    Moderator
    Join Date
    Aug 2010
    Location
    Marikina City
    Posts
    26,785
    Rep Power
    150
    Lambanog is distilled from Tuba and in my experience can be almost as strong as Jamaican overproof rum.

    I've had some really rough home made brew at our local village and also some quite nice stuff in Manila.

    This new Lakan is already on my bucket list


  3. #3
    Trusted Member
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Location
    Pangasinan
    Posts
    25,596
    Rep Power
    150



    If it helps the farmers make some more money...all's good.


  4. #4
    Moderator fred's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2006
    Location
    South,North East,somewhere.
    Posts
    11,433
    Rep Power
    150
    Quote Originally Posted by Terpe View Post
    Lambanog is distilled from Tuba and in my experience can be almost as strong as Jamaican overproof rum.

    I've had some really rough home made brew at our local village and also some quite nice stuff in Manila.

    This new Lakan is already on my bucket list
    Me too.. Ive had it tasting like a fine Liqueur and like rocket fuel.
    The worrying thing was the rocket fuel was bought at NAIA.


  5. #5
    Trusted Member jake's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 2012
    Location
    philippines
    Posts
    1,868
    Rep Power
    130
    Quote Originally Posted by Terpe View Post
    I've had some really rough home made brew at our local village and also some quite nice stuff in Manila
    Do you know if the home brew was 'natural' or 'chemical'? The nice stuff was more than likely a chemical with a dash of pure lambanog for taste and smell

    We have 2 manufactures of lambanog within 500m of our house. One has two hectares with coconut trees. Since the typhoon he is lucky to produce 5 gallons a day. The other manufacturer doesn't have any trees and miraculously produces 500 gallons a day!


  6. #6
    Trusted Member jake's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 2012
    Location
    philippines
    Posts
    1,868
    Rep Power
    130
    Quote Originally Posted by fred View Post
    The worrying thing was the rocket fuel was bought at NAIA.
    The longer it ferments, the more potent it becomes

    Up until 3 years ago, I drank lambanog on a regular basis. Too often according to the wife

    Goes great with Ginataang palaka (frogs legs in coconut milk)


  7. #7
    Moderator fred's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2006
    Location
    South,North East,somewhere.
    Posts
    11,433
    Rep Power
    150
    Quote Originally Posted by jake View Post
    The longer it ferments, the more potent it becomes

    Up until 3 years ago, i drank lambanog on a regular basis. Too often according to the wife
    Goes great with Ginataang palaka (frogs legs in coconut milk)
    The good stuff I had was in Naga city Bicol.. An old timer made it and aged it in ripe jack fruit..Or thats what I was told.. Very nice!


Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Similar Threads

  1. Xmas spirit...
    By grahamw48 in forum Loose Talk, Chat and Off Topic
    Replies: 5
    Last Post: 22nd November 2013, 13:18
  2. Filipino community spirit
    By grahamw48 in forum Living in the Philippines
    Replies: 7
    Last Post: 15th August 2012, 09:13
  3. £5.00 off two meals Spirit Inns
    By Dedworth in forum Recommendations & Reviews
    Replies: 0
    Last Post: 22nd March 2012, 18:54

Tags for this Thread

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  

Filipino Forum : Philippine Forum