Strawberry Picking Resumes in January 2009

December 14, 2008 by lisa  
Filed under benguet

The same ladies selling the fruit baskets were also selling strawberry wines in different sizes and prices. They were actually holding out shot glasses for a free taste but I get woozy with a little alcohol these days. I was afraid to buy the ones selling at 3 for Php100 but they recommended it saying that it was more like fruit punch than wine, while the ones selling at Php100/bottle had 12% alcohol content. !2% alcohol?!! Careful not to light a cigarette after taking a swig, you might breathe some fire out of your mouth!!!

an assortment of strawberry products -- wines, jams, preserves

There were some peddlers selling strawberry taho and strawberry ice cream. I had to content myself with an ice cream sandwich.

One of my favorites as a child was the Magnolia Ice Cream Sandwich that is no longer available. It was made of vanilla ice cream sandwiched between two wafers. I was surprised to see burger buns hanging from the ice cream seller’s cart. We had previously bought homemade strawberry ice cream in a wafer cone that Filipinos like to call “dirty ice cream” that cost Php20.00 so we were surprised to hear that the sandwich, which was way larger and had 5 mini scoops total cost only Php15.00

homemade ice cream sandwich 'a la pinoy'

Well, the ice cream was more ice than cream. More like a sorbet really, and pretty refreshing, too, as La Trinidad is warmer than Baguio and we were out in the sun all afternoon. And since it cost only Php15.00, I really couldn’t complain.

And just like any frustrated tourist who did not get to engage in an activity as originally planned, I took it out on — shopping! By the time we got home, I had bought coffee wine, banana wine, both kinds of strawberry wine, seedless Sagada oranges (cheap at 6 pieces for Php100), two little bags of cashew at Php30 each and sweet white beans at Php20.00/bag.

So much wine for someone who no longer drinks alcohol. But I figured to try them out and tell you all about them in future posts. Coffee wine? Interesting…

One final piece of good news is that, although strawberry picking has to wait a few more weeks, the unique experience will be available just in time for all those coming up for the Panagbenga in February 2009. The farms should be yielding abundantly by then.

I have included at Go Baguio! recently complete instructions on how to get to the Strawberry Farm, by car or via public transportation, for everybody’s reference. I try to keep the information in my main website as permanent as possible, while all the information that needs updating is included in this blog.

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Comments

23 Responses to “Strawberry Picking Resumes in January 2009”
  1. restyrefuerzo says:

    Hi Lisa, also had my first taste of strawberries last week. The good ones were selling at 150ps a kilo in the market. What I got were the 100ps a kilo and got a half-kilo. Despite being small sized, they were sweet. Went well with the waffles. Slurrp.

  2. lisa says:

    Hi Resty, I must say that the ones we got from Strawberry Farm were perfect, too! They were large and ready to eat but too ripe. And the ones in the bottom of the basket were not too small either. I guess there would be an advantage to getting them direct from the source than from resellers at the market. All b & b guests got a taste with whipped nestle cream and sugar, too.

  3. JM says:

    Oh yes the sinfully good whipped nestle cream and fresh strawberries are good…but i love topping the strawberries and whipped cream in crushed grahams crust! oh yes with chocolate syrup too!

  4. lisa says:

    Oh yes! Try this on for size: vanilla ice cream on any kind of chiffon cake (even stale ones, mind you) topped with strawberries and, yes, chocolate syrup!!!

  5. Bok says:

    fresh strwberries, well they’re sour and a little sweet. When is the strawberry festival.

  6. lisa says:

    Hi Bok,

    Strawberry Season is from November to May while La Trinidad usually holds a strawberry festival along with the Adivay (their “fiesta”) in November.

  7. cris says:

    hi… were planning to go to baguio this march … can’t wait… looking and reading your site everytime i have a time.. great help.. thanks a lot.

  8. lisa says:

    Hey Cris,

    Thanks for dropping by — I’m sure you’ll have grand old time here in March!

    :)

  9. cris says:

    hi lisa
    hope you could help me with this cant decide which house would i choose..i found a transient house near imelda village rd. brookside and one in greenwater village… just want to ask yung best transient house in terms of accessibility to transportation and places we would like visit… thanks a lot!

  10. lisa says:

    Hi Cris,

    In terms of accessibility to transportation, Imelda Village (but that’s a whole lot of houses by the riverbanks so I do not like the neighborhood. Greenwater has a jeepney line and when you walk to Military Cut off and turn right and walk a few meters, you will be on Upper Session Road and Loakan. As for both neighborhoods, I prefer Greenwater because it seems safer. But take note, both are not subdivisions, ok? Maybe you’d be better off at Montecillo still. Better neighborhood.

  11. Joseph John Fernandez says:

    Hi Lisa Im from a television network in Manila. We would like to feature Strawberry Farm in one of our show. Do you have any contact number of the owner manager or anyone from the Farm? Hope to hear from you very soon as our target shoot is this Sunday March 1 2009. Thank You very Much. heres my email ad josephjohn_fernandez@yahoo.com. Tnx again

  12. lisa says:

    Sorry Joseph John, no cellphone contact info. It’s not like the Strawberry Farm is a hacienda with an office.

    You may want to send a scout to get more info for your television show, or to perhaps set an appointment because sometimes they run out of strawberries for picking.

    :)

  13. bidang says:

    liz, its martha. read about your mamita. really something about us, connected. Have to confirm with mom and my aunts because I’m from the family of Foz-Zaragoza-Ravago. Recently I received photos of other aunts and my great grandfather….I’m so awake now with this added info of yours. Charina Zaragoza is a cousin of my mom….so there must be a connection. Then Katrina Chamsay is your cousin, my friend here.
    We’ve got to get together.real soon.
    My old computer crashed on me and lost your contact.
    Please continue your writings, you write well and you are an inspiration.
    Take care!

  14. lisa says:

    Hi Martha (Bidang),

    Yo soy tisoy (tisay doesn’t rhyme)! Then we’re cousins, because both my grandfather and grandmother were Zaragozas, too, and Charina is my aunt. Now I have to call you guys Martha and Manny! Tell Joanna and Justin to start calling me Tita. Hahaha.

    Yes, Katrina is my first cousin. Her mom Ma. Eugenia “Gene” Araneta who married Agustin “Tuting” Perdices is my father’s eldest sister. Katrina and her husband Wally talk about this “uber-rich eccentric woman from Baguio who loves gardening” (Wally’s exact words) at Alexandra.

    I will leave my contact info at O Mai Khan.

    Miss you guys! Baguio isn’t the same without you!

    :)

  15. casper says:

    try to visit also my province sagada a beautiful place you will never regret if you go there^^

  16. lisa says:

    Oh yes, Casper!

    I just came from Sagada a few weeks ago (my third visit in recent years) and am so in love with your charming little town.

    Am working on a full travel guide for Sagada at Go Baguio!. So far I have written How to Get to Sagada via Baguio City, and How to Get to Sagada from Manila via Banaue so that folks will have an easier time getting there (it’s editing 600 photos that’s taking me so looong to finish the full section), then you guys can take it from there and give the folks the extraordinary vacation that Sagada always delivers.

    You guys rock!

  17. clumsygirl says:

    hi lisa, thanks for the info. by the way, were planning to visit this november, is this the best time? super thanks in advance…

  18. lisa says:

    Hi clumsygirl,

    Usually, strawberries are ready for picking by November, if the Philippines wet season ends as usual by September. Strawberries are cheapest in January.

    :)

  19. Agnes Voo says:

    Hello Lisa, I stumbled on your website as I check on Baguio. I am a Malaysian, hoping to visit Baguio for the first time from 18th to 20th November 2009. I am interested in strawberry picking too. I wonder if the two very terrible typhoons that devastated Manila recently has any negative effect on Baguio.

  20. lisa says:

    Hi Agnes,

    We do not expect strawberry picking to go on as scheduled in November, as that area in La Trinidad is precisely that which experienced flooding. So the farmers will probably be ready only in January.

    Since your visit will coincide with the Ad Congress, you can be sure that Baguio City will be filled with fun activities to keep you busy. There are of course the Baguio classics — horseback riding and boating that you will probably enjoy, too.

    November generally has lovely, chilly weather very similar to Genting Highlands (was there last year) and it’s a city with a lot of shopping for artifacts and other ethnic stuff, plus strawberry products and preserves to try.

    We may just not have ENOUGH strawberries for picking but there’s a good chance they’ll appear in the Cafe by the Ruins “Strawberry Festival” menu by then.

    :)

  21. Caryl Gonzales says:

    Hi Lisa,

    I appreciate your site. Very informative! I am planning to visit Baguio tomorrow with my family till Jan. 1 (spur of the moment plans). I wanted to have my kids experience Strawberry picking. I got confused by your info that picking will start January, is that 2010?

    I plan to go there Thursday morning, Dec. 31 and follow your suggestion at Jack’s. Will there be strawberry picking open?

    Hope to hear from you soonest. Thank you!

  22. resty says:

    Strawberries at 35-40 pesos a half kilo.

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  1. [...] world as the Baguio Insider, writes that strawberry picking in the La Trinidad farms in Benguet is a few months late this season. But while the price of fresh strawberries seem to be dropping in Baguio City, from P250 per kilo [...]



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