Tuesday, August 15, 2023

It's undeniably difficult to look for natural, organic, cruelty-free products in the local supermarkets. Most of the time, we are bombarded by ultra processed,  over packaged goods that are not exactly environmentally friendly and good for our minds and body. Enter Simple and Whole, a beautiful place to find curated organic food, lifestyle and self-care products that cater to a healthful and more mindful consumption.  If you visit SM City Iloilo, find time to visit this store which opened at the lower ground floor  near Toby's Sports. 

Here are some of the products worth checking out:

1. Buhay Ermitanyo's vegan cheese and spreads
2. Bach Remedy flower tinctures
3. Plant based milk
4. Besan and almond flour for baking
5. Eco-friendly stuff for kids
6. Four Sigmatic tea blends 
7. Tsaa laya herbal teas
8. We Pure concentrated stevia drops for your coffee
9.  Vegetable seasoning cubes and fresh herbs and spices
10. Lifestyle Gourmet snacks and chips

Too busy to visit the store? You can also shop online via Lazada and Shopee!

Live simply and truthfully. Stay simple and whole!










Wednesday, February 5, 2025

The new year is all about manifesting and living a healthier lifestyle and embracing the medicinal power of clean eating. In a world dominated by fast, inflammatory foods, it is necessary to rethink our diet choices if we want a healthier and more resilient body and mind many years down the road.  It's not too late to eat healthy. Get inspiration from my Manila based college bestie who was able to heal her body through the power of plant-based eating. Read on and enjoy this guest post! Happy and healthy new year everyone!

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by Ava the Gardener

When my niece said she was going to stay with us for a week to give eating healthy a try, my husband and I welcomed her with open arms. Little did she know, however, that there was more to our daily regimen than eating plants.  

An incoming college junior, the first lesson we taught her is that food is the body’s fuel. It provides the body with the energy it needs to function. Without food, the body cannot regenerate cells, synthesize hormones, produce antibodies or enzymes, and everything else it does to keep us alive. Our bodies convert any food we eat into sugar, combining it with water and oxygen to transform it into the energy we need to breathe, regulate our heartbeat, digest our food, and function. The pancreas then secretes insulin to control the absorption and release of sugar. Any excess sugar that overburdens the pancreas is stored as fat either in our liver or beneath the skin around our bodies.

Her second lesson is that the closer food is to its natural state, the greater the likelihood it is a complex carbohydrate. Our bodies work harder to digest the chemical structure and fibers in complex carbohydrates and the energy from such food is released over a longer period of time. Natural and whole foods like fresh vegetables have higher water, fiber, and nutrient contents. They also have lower glycemic indexes, which naturally stimulate our metabolism and make us feel full with lesser calories. The Glycemic Index (GI) is a measure of how much a particular food raises our blood sugar levels once our bodies absorb it.



Simple carbohydrates, meanwhile, are composed of smaller sugar molecules that our bodies quickly absorb. They come from processed food that have been stripped of their natural nutrients and fiber. Though edible, they are low in fiber and nutrients yet have high glycemic indexes, which results in higher blood sugar levels that make us feel tired. If not used immediately, the sugar from these empty calories is converted into fat.

Complex carbohydrates provide a slower and more sustained release of energy, thus contributing to long-term health, appetite control, and sustained energy levels. This understanding is necessary in applying the third lesson: preparing and eating meals from fresh vegetables, whole grains, nuts, seeds, and legumes— similar to those our Filipino ancestors ate—to combat obesity, diabetes, and decrease the chance of chronic illness.

Even with my niece asleep on the sofa, my husband and I kept the daily rhythm of our lives. We woke up at 4:30 am to pray the rosary and novena for the dead before preparing breakfast. I bought fresh produce from the wet market after 6:00 am mass while my husband walked the dogs around the neighborhood. We would then have breakfast together before he left for work. Of her own volition, my niece quickly adapted to our schedule. She particularly enjoyed walking her canine cousins and meeting their friends.

For breakfast on weekdays, we would prepare something quick yet filling like avocado on wholegrain toast. We also made scrambled omelette from chickpea flour, often sauteed with garlic, onion, tomato, and mushroom. Sometimes we had wholegrain oats, muesli, and nuts. We also made French toast and pancakes from the same chickpea batter. Rice meals during breakfast were served on weekends or on any day that we knew would be particularly hectic. On such days unpolished rice was made into champorado with unsweetened chocolate or sinangag that was paired with a chickpea scramble, store-bought vegan sausage, or a tomato bean stew. At breakfast, my niece chose from several unsweetened warm beverages: brewed coffee, hot chocolate made with tablea, or rice coffee “kapeng bigas” (unpolished rice dry roasted in a pan).

“I learned that I can live without meat and sweets, but not without coffee,” she says.

Except for my husband who usually had a packed lunch, my niece and I seldom ate at noon, engrossed as we were in household chores, working from home, writing, reading, or drawing. We kept breakfast light and fasted for lunch, but dinner was usually a feast centered around eat-all-you-can servings of unpolished rice and vegetables. Preparing for dinner usually began as early as 4:00 pm, when unpolished rice was left to soak while the vegetables bought from the market that morning were washed, peeled, sliced, and diced. To keep the body in balance, dishes constituting different fresh vegetables—sprouts, fruit vegetables, leafy greens, root crops, and beans—should be eaten at each meal to strengthen the body’s major organs.

For instance, to strengthen the weak lungs that my niece has struggled with since birth, we fed her beans by cooking monggo, French beans with carrots and mushrooms, or kalabasa with sigarilyas simmered in coconut cream. “I can eat tokwa every day, I like it even if it’s not fried,” she says. Though beans are a daily staple in our household, neither my husband or I have gout. My niece was also able to walk the dogs daily despite eating beans often. The digestion of beans leads to uric acid buildup in joints only in the presence of excess animal protein and sugar.

When my niece decided to extend her stay for another ten days, my husband and I secretly wept for joy. She has kept in touch and continues to cook and eat healthy upon her return to university, with her landlady and housemates serving as eager guinea pigs for her kitchen experiments: tofu sisig, stir-fried togue with tokwa, beans, and carrots; sauteed vegetables with mushrooms; soy-garlic tofu sandwich with tomato, onions, and cucumber;  kalabasa-kamote mac and cheese.

“They all say my cooking tastes good,” she says.

Her staycation with us has led my niece to discover for herself that beyond serving as fuel for the body, creating healthy home-cooked meals is a sharing of self with family of one’s choosing.   


 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Ava and her husband have kept the daily practice of cooking and eating local whole grains and vegetables for the past sixteen years. She learned how to do so at the Kitchen Klinik to manage Stevens-Johnson’s Syndrome, a rare autoimmune disorder she was diagnosed with in 2009. Ava’s dissertation on the successful use of plant-based food as medicine received a Highest Distinction merit and earned her a Ph.D. in Applied Cosmic Anthropology.

Wednesday, October 11, 2023


Adapting to a vegan lifestyle is easier now than ever if you live in Iloilo City. Whole food stores like Simple and Whole and vegan restaurants like Buhay Ermitanyo promote a gentler,more conscious approach to consumption and self-care. You can now find various vegan cheeses produced by Buhay Ermitanyo, purveyor of vegan lifestyle at Simple and Whole at SM City Iloilo.You can create your recipes at home or try my version. Happy airfrying!

Sunday, May 27, 2018


Siargao Island in Surigao del Norte, Philippines has been on my travel radar for the longest time. Finally this year, I made it into a summer getaway project, bringing two other desk chained friends with me. For three days we did nothing but sleep, eat and bask in the island's lush landscapes and scenic ocean views. Flanked by the Pacific Ocean on the west, Siargao Island is unbelievably pristine and wild. The whole island is covered with incredibly thick coconut rainforest canopy and seductive surf coastlines. Like any other idyllic tropical island, Siargao is blessed with crystalline waters in various permutations of blue. 

Siargao is ideal for surfers but for non-surfers like me, the activities to enjoy are limited to island hopping, hanging out at the Boardwalk, sunset watching, sleeping in and exploring random shops and eateries. It's easy to get bored after a couple of days. The island is not that commercially infiltrated so the choices in retail, cuisine and activities are quite limited. The accommodations are simple and humble, true to the island's primitive, laidback vibe.  Overall I had an enjoyable stay and I forgot my cares and worries for a while.

In the meantime, stay green and wild Siargao! 

Hop aboard my tiny boat

Crystalline waters of the purest hues surround  Siargao's most popular island hopping destinations- Naked, Dako and Guyam Islands. 

Docking in Guyam Island's craggy shores

Island kids rollin' in the biggest sandbox of them all

The best vantage point to feel like a real islander is in Guyam Island

Warm  tidal pools in Guyam Island  to wade and soak in


Stopping by Naked Island for a quick dip. Living up to its name, the island (more like an exposed sandbar walkable in 5 minutes) is tiny, pristine and comically bare. Some enterprising people have planted a baby palm tree in the middle of the island. It's not so naked after all, haha.

Wallowing in pure bliss in Naked Island

A fiery sunset caps a surfing session at Cloud 9, Siargao

The surfing  tower at  Boardwalk, Cloud 9 in General Luna is Siargao's iconic structure. Recently closed for maintenance, the tower is a gateway to the island's best waves. Made of old, decaying wood, the structure can only acommodate a maximum of 100 people at a given time.

Riding out into the sunset

Waves are calling like a siren's song

Exposed coral beds during low tide

Non-surfers can enjoy a panoramic view of advanced surfing action during  from the 3-storey platform.  The area is characteristically dotted with coral beds, making it a challenging surfing area for beginners.

Surfers heading home before the platform closes at 6pm.

The signature Siargao sunset

Siargao's culinary secret spot. The food is good and memorable.

Kermit's Napolitana pizza with DIY toppings

Kermit's fresh salad 
Authentic Indonesian breakfast fare at Warung

Super filling and annoyingly healthy Cloud 9 Kook smoothie bowl  and coffee combo at Shaka Siargao Cafe Gallery




Plenty of coconut juice for sure

A magnificent view of Pilar's coconut plantations en route  to Mapupungko tidal pools


Hey, look up and watch out for falling coconuts!

It's best to visit Mapupungko tidal pools during low tide (usually between 12nn-3 pm). It's an hour away from General Luna.
Enchanting, ethereal, mysterious natural bathtubs that appear and disappear in the ebb and flow

Cliff diving, anyone?
That Dave Matthews Band song playing in my head
Eat, sleep, surf. Repeat.
Golden hour in Siargao
Japanese cruiser bicycles are a cheap mode of transport. One can rent a bike for Php 150 good for one day.
The friendliest dogs can be found in Siargao Island

Habal habal (single motorcycle) and tricycle (motorcycle with sidecar) are the only modes of transport in Siargao.  The island is also best explored on a bicycle since there are practically no rough roads.

Last hurrah before going back to the daily grind


Yay, we had a great time, Siargao! Thank you for the memories.
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