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in Manila, Manila Food

Column: Tasting Notes & Menu from the Interview with Australian Ambassador Steven J. Robinson

In my recent column for The Manila Bulletin, I had the lovely opportunity to get to know Australian Ambassador to the Philippines’ Steven J. Robinson. We talked about wine and great food coming from his home country and how quality doesn’t always have to come with such a heavy price.

It was so refreshing to meet someone who truly loves wine but is also easygoing with it. There are no rules, no wrong answers – it’s about what you like, no matter the color or the price point of your drink. “So in the old days, people used to say that you could only drink white wine with chicken and fish,” he said. “And then you could only drink red wine with beef and lamb. That’s actually not true at all. You do what you want to do.”

I used to discriminate against screw-top wines. I feel like most of us have been conditioned to think that corked wines will always be better, fancier. Turns out that’s not always the case. Also, corked wines need more care when stored. We all know what happens to wine when the cork dries up – one never has that problem with screw-tops. I learned so many things that evening but I think I’ll have to save them for another post.

For now, let me fulfill my promise at the end of my column, I’m sharing the wines and the food that we had and all the details about them – from price to where they’re available. Hopefully, these will be helpful for your media noche plans!

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in Almost Diplomatic on Print, Diplomatic Incidents, Uncategorized

Column: How did I even get here? And other questions I often ask myself

If you’ve been following me on my social media channels like Instagram, you prolly already know that I started a column with The Manila BulletinIt’s one of the major broadsheets in the country and I’m so happy to have space in their Lifestyle Section every Saturday. So if I haven’t been writing here much, you know where to find me. 😉 Here’s an excerpt from the first column I wrote for the paper – an introduction to Almost Diplomatic and how I ended up here. 

A diplomat’s wife and her stories from this world of envoys and their spouses or their dogs

“This fork is for your salad course, this one’s for dessert,” I found myself telling a woman not much younger than I was at one of Kuala Lumpur’s swanky restaurants. We were invited to have afternoon tea and the waitstaff were kind enough to bring out more cutlery than necessary when we asked for them. Their sole purpose was to enrich our discussion. It was 2016 and I’d been abroad for two years as a diplomat’s wife. My companion, a fellow freelance journalist, was interested in things that I should know for my said role. It’s how our conversation on proper dining started. She looked at me inquisitively. “How do you know all these? Do you eat like this at home? Do they teach you these in school?”

At home in Berlin with Juancho (@juanchothecorgi)

I admitted that I merely picked them up along the way, that I only brought out all manner of cutlery when we would host people at home and that no–they didn’t teach you these things in journ school.

While protocol and etiquette have always been interesting, they’re things you have to either learn extensively or pick up along the way. Goodness knows I only learned the difference between wine glasses three years prior to that conversation. I studied to be a journalist and while learning the difference between writing for print and broadcast, cutlery for formal dinners was never mentioned. Not all students end up in the diplomatic beat, after all.

Having a beer in one of Prague’s monasteries.

I grew up middle class and attended university to become a journalist. It’s all I ever wanted to be while growing up, watching TV with a hairbrush in my hand as my microphone, imitating Christiane Amanpour. “I’ll be her but with better hair,” eight-year-old me once said. I wasn’t brought up to be overly polite, you see. I was brought up to be competitive and do well in the career I would eventually choose. Classic Asian-tiger parenting.

I’ve been lucky to meet people from all walks of life and learn from them as a journalist, as a diplomat’s wife, and even as just a woman with her dog, waiting for the train from Charlottenburg to Prenzlauer Berg in Berlin.

A year after graduating, I found myself covering foreign affairs for a local English news channel. I’d interview diplomats about their time and work here as well as senior foreign ministry officials, usually about our country’s maritime and territorial disputes—hot topics during that time. At night, I attended diplomatic events with my fellow reporters where I learned through observation. Things like the difference between appetizers and hors d’oeuvres, why I shouldn’t have offered my hand to the Iranian ambassador, and the acceptable volume of one’s laugh. Spoiler alert: Mine went way over than what was pleasant to the ears.
8 Myths About the Life of a Diplomatic Spouse

There are fun events but that’s NOT the ONLY thing we do.

A former foreign minister loved to tell me to take the Foreign Service Officers’ (FSO) exam and his deputies often echoed his sentiments. I did toy with the idea but never got around to it, knowing that leaving journalism would be rather heartbreaking for me. Looking back, I’m glad I didn’t. Goodness knows how much trouble I’d cause as I had this terrible habit of not knowing when to stop talking. Thank goodness that’s under control now.

Continue reading Almost Diplomatic over at The Manila Bulletin

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