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Lulong sa laro ang anak na naiwan

Posted on 09 August 2019 No comments


Dismayado si Lisa nang malaman na hindi sinunod ng nag-iisa niyang anak na nasa Year 11 ang bilin niya na mag-aral ng mabuti at huwag atupagin ang paglalaro ng mga games sa kanyang cellphone.

Nais umuwi ni Lisa para kausapin ang anak nang masinsinan pero hindi siya pinayagan ng kanyang amo.

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Ang ginawa niya ay tinawagan ang anak at binalaan na uuwi na lang siya at sayang lang ang perang pinapadala niya buwan-buwan para panggastos.

Bahala na kung hindi makapagtapos ng pag-aaral ang anak.

Hirap na hirap si Lisa sa pagpapaliwanag sa anak tungkol sa kahalagahan ng edukasyon, dahil kahit galit na siya ay ayaw pa ring makinig sa kanyang pangaral.


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Ang asawa niya ay hindi rin nakakatulong sa pagbabantay sa anak at laging dinadahilan ang pagbibyahe ng traysikel.

Pagkatapos nito ay dinala si Lisa ng kanyang mga amo sa China ng dalawang linggo, at ginawa niyang dahilan ito para hindi siya makontak ng kanyang mag-ama.

Sinabi niyang hirap siyang maka-konekta sa internet doon, pero ang totoo ay palihim siyang nakipag-ugnayan sa kanyang mga magulang para kamustahin ang anak.


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Nakiusap siya sa kanila na kung maari ay kausapin nila ang bata at sabihin na wala siyang sahod sa China, at baka matauhan na ito.

Laking tuwa niya nang sa muli nilang chat ay sinabi ng kanyang mga magulang na iniiwan na ng bata ang kanyang telepono sa kanyang lola bago pumasok sa paaralan, at kinukuha na lang muli sa hapon kapag tapos na ang homework.

Dinadasal ngayon ni Lisa na sana ay magpatuloy na sa pag-aaral ng mabuti ang kanyang anak para hindi masayang ang kanyang pinagpaguran sa Hong Kong. Si Lisa ay 43 taung gulang, tubong Cavite at nagtatrabaho sa Sheung Shui. – Rodelia Villar
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JUST DESSERTS

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We go sweet in this issue. More specifically, Pinoy sweet, as we collect recipes for traditional desserts in the Philippines which are,  however, often served as merienda (afternoon or tea-time) snack because they are laden with flour or glutinous rice, and are therefore, too heavy for rounding up a meal.

However, some restaurants or hotels have found that serving them bite-size, or alongside traditional desserts such as ice cream, make them look just the right thing to serve after a meal.
But for many Filipinos who were raised partaking these heavenly treats in their original size and form, plus mode of cooking, no fusion or twist could ever be as sweet.

However, recent innovations have made cooking these desserts a lot of easier.

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For instance, instead of going through the tedious process of soaking sticky rice, then grinding it to form the dough necessary to cook carioca and palitaw, you can just use glutinous rice flour which you can find in most grocery stores. Just add water and - voila! You have your dough.
For maruya, there are many recipes available online, each prescribing a different consistency for the flour and the ingredients you mix it with. But there is one key ingredient one must not dispense with, or substitute with something else, and that is our native saba banana.
But as with all recipes, one needs to find one that works best, or to keep improvising until the end-product looks as yummy as the one seen in the pictures or videos, or as unforgettable as the one your mother or grandma served to you as a kid.

Take your sweet time re-discovering these favorite Filipino treats!


Maruya (Banana Fritters )

Ingredients
6 pcs ripe saba bananas, mashed
1 cup all- purpose flour
1 tsp baking powder
1 egg, beaten
1 cup fresh milk
1 & ½ tsp vanilla extract
¾ cup granulated white sugar
½ tsp salt
¾ cups cooking oil

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Procedure:
1. Combine flour, baking powder, salt, and ½ cup sugar in a large bowl and mix well.
2. Gradually add the mashed bananas while mixing.
3. Add the egg, vanilla extract, and milk. Mix well to incorporate all the ingredients.
4. In a pan, heat half of the oil. When the oil becomes hot, scoop about ½ cup of the mixture and fry in the pan (add the remaining oil in the next batches).Fry both sides until the color turns golden brown.
5. Sprinkle the remaining sugar on both sides.
Serve and enjoy!


Carioca (Sweet Rice Balls)

From Panlasang Pinoy

Ingredients:
1 cup sweet rice flour (glutinous rice flour can be used as a substitute)
1 cup sweetened shredded coconut
3/4 cup coconut milk
2 cups cooking oil
Coating:
1/4 cup brown sugar
1/2 cup coconut milk

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Procedure:
1. In a mixing bowl, combine sweet rice flour, sweetened shredded coconut, and coconut milk. Mix well until a dough is formed.
2. Scoop about a tablespoon and a half of the mixture then form into a ball shaped figure. Set aside.
3. Heat a cooking pot then pour-in cooking oil.
4. Deep fry the mixture that were formed into balls in medium heat for 5 to7 minutes or until the color turns light to medium brown.
5. Turn off heat and remove the balls from the cooking pot. Transfer the balls to a plate lined with paper towel. Set aside.
6. Start making the coating by heating a saucepan and pouring the coconut milk in. Let the coconut milk boil then add the brown sugar and stir continuously until the mixture thickens. Turn off heat.
7. Dip the fried balls into the coating then skewer, if desired.
8. Serve. Share and enjoy!


Palitaw (Pinoy Mochi Cakes)

From Lalaine Manalo, Kawaling Pinoy

Ingredients
1/4 cup sesame seeds
1/2 cup sugar
2 cups glutinous rice flour
1 cup water
1 cup grated mature coconut
water for boiling

Instructions
1) In a pan over medium heat, toast sesame seeds, stirring frequently, for about 30 to 40 seconds or until lightly browned and fragrant. Remove from heat and allow to cool.
2) In a bowl, combine toasted sesame seeds and sugar. Set aside.
3) In a bowl, combine rice flour and water and mix into a soft, pliable dough.
4) Divide the dough into portions and using the palm of hands, shape into balls and then flatten into oval disks about 1/4-inch thick.
5) In a pot over medium heat, bring about 5-inch deep of water into a rolling boil. Individually drop the rice patties into the boiling water, making sure not to overcrowd the pot. Cook for about 2 to 3 minutes or until the patties float to the surface,
6) Using a slotted spoon, remove from the water and drain well. Arrange in a single layer on a parchment-lined platter to keep from sticking together and let cool just enough to touch.
7) While still warm, roll the palitaw on grated coconut to fully coat. Sprinkle with sesame-sugar mixture before serving, or serve on the side.

Tips on how to make the best Palitaw:
1) To get the perfect chewy texture, you need the right ratio of glutinous rice flour and water. Not enough liquid and the cakes will be hard to chew. Too much and the patties will be hard to form.
 2) I find 1 cup of water to 2 cups of flour yields the best texture for my taste. The mixture will look dry at first but keep on mixing with your hands until it gathers into a smooth dough. The consistency you’re looking for is like that of soft, pliable putty.
3) For more uniform size, use a small scoop to portion out the dough and use the palm of your hands to roll each portion into a ball and then flatten into an oval shape about 1/4 thick. If the dough is sticking, wet hands in between shaping.
4) Once the patties rise to the surface, use a slotted spoon to remove them from the water right away to keep from over-cooking. Drain well.
5) Let them cool just enough to touch and begin rolling in grated coconut as they coat better when still warm.
6) Roll the patties immediately in coconut but sprinkle the sugar-sesame mixture when you’re ready to serve as the sugar tends to dissolve over time. Or you can serve it on the side and allow the guests to sweeten the cakes as they like.
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Bello weighing 4 bets for labor attaché post

Posted on 08 August 2019 No comments


By Vir B. Lumicao

Philippine Labor Secretary Silvestre Bello III has reportedly narrowed down his choices for the post recently vacated by Labor Attache Jalilo dela Torre.

Word filtering from the Philippine Overseas Labor Office in Hong Kong indicates that Bello is considering four candidates, although no date has been set for naming his final choice.

Polo officer-in-charge Antonio Villafuerte said the four people being mentioned are: former labor attaché in Macau Ramon Pastrana, and incumbents Nasser Munder in Jeddah, Cesar Chavez at the Manila Economic and Cultural Office Labor Center in Taipei, and Fidel Macauyag at the MECO-Taichung Extension Office.

Image result for fidel macauyag photo
Macauyag, CDO's  former top prosecutor, is said to be Bello's first choice, but he has a pending case
It may be a tough call, as all four candidates are known to have either a checkered work history, insufficient experience, or unsuitable temperament.  

Top of the list is said to be Macauyag, a lawyer who was former labor attaché to Jeddah before his posting to Taichung, the second largest city of Taiwan.
He was with the Office of the Prosecutor General before he was named as one of the eight new attaches of the Department of Labor and Employment in 2017. Previously, he worked for nine years as city prosecutor of Cagayan de Oro City.

“I hear Macauyag has his foot inside the door,” a source told The SUN. But he added that there could be a problem because the candidate has a pending case before the Ombudsman, which could be why he was moved to Taichung.
The source explained that officials assigned to Taiwan need no Ombudsman clearance as it is officially not a diplomatic post but a trade and cultural office, as the Philippines recognizes Taiwan as part of China.

Another candidate, Munder, is reportedly known among his colleagues in the Middle East as being too friendly with employment agencies, and “would be like fish out of the water” if deployed to Hong Kong. He would surely be targeted by worker advocates if he is moved here.
As for Pastrana, he is widely regarded as not being experienced enough for Hong Kong, where there are more than 200,000 Filipino migrant workers, compared with just about a fourth of this figure in Macau, where he was previously posted.

Chavez, on the other hand, is said to be “too headstrong and too full of himself,” despite having enough experience.

Whoever is selected will surely face an acid test in Hong Kong, as he will be succeeding a well-regarded, highly experienced and hardworking labor attaché.
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Ex-DH accused of fleeing from $35k loan 3 years ago

Posted on 07 August 2019 No comments

By Vir B. Lumicao

A Filipina former domestic helper who went home in 2016 after borrowing $35,000 from a Hong Kong financing company without disclosing that her work contract had been terminated, made a mistake of returning here as a tourist and is now in detention.

Image may contain: outdoor
Kowloon City Court building
Ranie Lou Buena Cosa appeared at Kowloon City Court on Aug 6 to apply for bail, but the prosecution objected, saying she is a flight risk.

Buena Cosa was charged with “obtaining pecuniary advantage by deception” after being arrested last month when she tried to re-enter Hong Kong as a tourist.
Magistrate Woo Huey-fang rejected the bail application and ordered Buena Cosa returned to custody. But he advised her that she can make the same application with the Court of First Instance.

The defendant allegedly took out a loan of $35,000 from Prime Credit on Apr 13, 2016, using her work contract as proof of employment. The financing firm approved the loan, not knowing that the helper had been terminated a few days and was due to fly to the Philippines shortly.
After Buena Cosa failed to pay her monthly installment, the lending firm learned that she had fled to the Philippines, and reported the case to the police.

Last month, Buena Cosa returned to Hong Kong to visit a sister who also works in the city, but Immigration officers at the airport intercepted her and turned her over to the police.
Buena Cosa will appear in court again on Aug 26.
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Filipina who jumped bail 3 years ago re-arrested at airport

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By Vir B. Lumicao

No photo description available.
The fake goods found inside the TST flats (Customs & Excise Dept photo)
A 37-year-old Filipina former domestic worker who jumped bail more than three years ago was sentenced to four months in jail on Aug 6, after being re-arrested at the airport when she tried to get in as a tourist recently.

Russell de Castro, 37, pleaded guilty to possessing fake branded goods worth $1.26 million, which she claimed were owned by a man who had hired her as a parttime worker.

She was immediately jailed on orders of Kowloon City Court Magistrate Woo Huey-fang, who rejected the defense lawyer’s request for a lenient sentence, citing her record of absconding.
De Castro was arrested by police on Jul 28, 2015 after she was seen acting suspiciously when she emerged from a lift on the first floor of Hankow Apartments in Tsimshatsui.

When questioned, she introduced herself as an employee of GM Trading with offices on the first floor of the building. Officers searched six units in the building which she identified and found a hoard of fake branded goods inside.

De Castro said she had worked in the shop for only three days, and was paid $300 a day by Shah Habab, a Pakistani who she identified as the owner of GM Trading.
Officers from the Customs and Excise Department and Customs contacted by police inspected the goods and declared all to be counterfeit. The goods were seized and taken to the Tsimshatsui Police Station.

De Castro and Habab were arrested, and the Filipina was questioned further at the North Police station.

Both were subsequently allowed to post bail, and the Filipina took the chance to flee to the Philippines on May 28, 2016. Habab, meanwhile, was sentenced to six months’ imprisonment.
When De Castro returned to Hong Kong as a tourist on Jul 10 this year, she was intercepted at Hong Kong International Airport and hauled to court.

As part of reading out the charges against her, the prosecution recited a long list of branded counterfeit items seized from GM Trading, including 875 pieces of Louis Vuitton handbags, 865 Coach, 240 Chanel, 200 Burberry, 290 Prada; 334 pairs of Nike and 202 pairs of New Balance shoes, 740 Abercrombie & Fitch T-shirts, 314 Lacoste T-shirts, 720 pieces of fake Ice Watch timepieces, 620 Prada wallets, 260 Lacoste handbags, 260 Polo Ralph Lauren T-shirts, 930 Louis Vuitton and 630 Coach wallets, Oakley and Gucci sunglasses, and one Rolex watch.
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