“I wanted more! I wanted to see what they are offering in this side of the world.”
“The pattern is almost the same when they cook. Kasi in the kitchen there’s only one language naman eh. But what struck me the most about Greek food is the simplicity of it.”
“I was so sure that they’ll like it but at the end of the day I was still worried that it might not be accepted. Maybe it’s just me. Maybe I’m just too confident about it.”
“You have to remember that at the end of the day you are not feeding Greeks, you are feeding Pinoys… I need to understand how I can tailor-fit my cuisine or that dish of a particular country to the Filipinos. Educating Filipinos more and not imposing on them; offering an experience that we would easily accept.”
“What I’m really passionate about is great food, but then again my real desire here is to create jobs. To have farmers, not only importers who benefit from what I do… for them to be able to produce great ingredients, great vegetables or produce. They’re also profiting from this not just the middleman.”
“I’m against commercialization. We don’t operate a commissary. All my restaurants are chef-based, recipe-based. We don’t have anything in a commissary sending us cooked food. We don’t have a microwave in the restaurant. If ever, we use it for the employee’s meals… It’s really about quality. Remember you’re (customers are) paying a lot of money and my responsibility is to give you high quality food, prepped by chefs.
"My wish is...I want kitchens to start cooking and not start assembling.”
“It’s not really about passion, for me I believe it’s really your desire to come up with food that’s consistently great.”