How the slow food movement has taken root in the Philippines

A culinary journey from soil to sea in the archipelago
A grilled fish fillet glistens with fatty oil, the star of a dish demonstrating Negros’s slow food movement.
Credit: Rocio Diaz Arcela
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Every dish serves a story – of history, tradition and the people who plate and shape it. On Negros, the Philippines’ third-most-populous island, a new generation is carving a fresh culinary identity, guided by the tenets and techniques of the global “slow food” movement.

Robusta farmer Teddy Cañete examines a plant.

Credit: Rocio Diaz Arcela

The words Slow Food are etched into the sand in Sagay City.

Credit: Rocio Diaz Arcela

A farmer at Fresh Start Organic Farm looks at the camera between two sugar canes.

Credit: Rocio Diaz Arcela

Negros was recently named the first official Slow Food Travel Destination in the Asia-Pacific region . Here, travellers are invited to take a deeper bite. Curious foodies don’t just visit the bountiful fields nicknamed the “sugar bowl” of the Philippines. Instead, farm-to-table dining and eco-tours celebrate Negrense culinary heritage and indigenous foodways – and every visit and meal further empowers the stewards keeping the island’s traditions alive.

Ramon Chin Chin Uy Jr holds a leaf towards the camera.

Credit: Rocio Diaz Arcela

Greenhouses are lined up in a row at Fresh Start Organic Farm.

Credit: Rocio Diaz Arcela

Growth in wisdom

“There’s so much potential when you’re closer to where the food is grown,” says Ramon “Chin Chin” Uy Jr, recognised as the Slow Food councillor for South East Asia by the global Slow Food Foundation. At Lanai by Freshstart , Uy’s restaurant in the province of Negros Occidental’s capital of Bacolod, much of the produce comes from the Fresh Start Organic Farm he co-founded in the city of Silay alongside his wife Francine Uy in 2005. “One teaspoon of fertiliser has a trillion more useful bacteria than the number of people on Earth,” he adds, holding up a hand bursting with fungi compost, microbes, wood chips and worms.

Uy has partnered with thousands of farmers, promoting sustainable practices that prioritise flavour and fair wages. “Our goal is to turn Negros island – and eventually the entire country – fully organic,” he says. Uy’s philosophy is simple: “Feed the soil and the soil will feed the plants.”

Teddy Cañete holds a handful of coffee beans.

Credit: Rocio Diaz Arcela

Sauma Farm, Bar and Kitchen has an expansive green field.

Credit: Rocio Diaz Arcela

A sign at a robusta coffee farm points to a plant.

Credit: Rocio Diaz Arcela

Reclaiming roots

Farmer Chris Fadriga first stumbled upon criollo cacao not on a plantation but in a backyard, where pods clung to neglected trees. While this rare cacao variety is nearly extinct in Mesoamerica, the Philippines has become its natural guardian, with the archipelago’s separated islands creating a natural barrier to cross-pollination. Today, Fadriga is among the world’s largest producers of criollo by hectarage; despite global demand, he still works closely with small farmers, sharing knowledge and guiding cultivation.

A coffee bean rests atop coffee grounds.

Credit: Rocio Diaz Arcela

Reyna 

Coffee, too, has followed a similar path of rediscovery. Although the Philippines imports about 80 per cent of its supply, recent years have seen a building movement to support local growers. Indigenous farmer Teddy Cañete plants robusta trees, a crop dismissed by foreign buyers yet bought cheaply to mass-produce instant blends. Now, Cañete shares his experiences at workshops to empower other coffee farmers on the island. “As long as you conserve biodiversity and cultivate a healthy environment, with good climate and soil, you can have good coffee,” he says.

While centuries of cultural imports and influences often obscure the Philippines’ indigenous roots, Negrense cuisine stands out for its native ingredients, such as batwan fruit and kadyos peas, as well as dishes prepared using traditional techniques like kinilaw (vinegar-cured seafood) and inasal (marinated charcoal-grilled meat).

A skewer is shown at Sauma Farm, Bar & Kitchen.

Credit: Rocio Diaz Arcela

A hand holds up a rambutan.

Credit: Rocio Diaz Arcela

A dish is served in a wooden bowl at Sauma Far, Bar & Kitchen.

Credit: Rocio Diaz Arcela

At Sauma Farm, Bar & Kitchen , in Hinigaran municipality, chef Don Colmenares showcases the island’s bounty through a hyperlocal degustation dining experience. “Although the presentation may change, what we’re really doing is telling guests the stories behind each ingredient,” he says.

A hand holds onto a blue crab.

Credit: Rocio Diaz Arcela

A crab dish after preparation is placed on a stove to cook.

Credit: Rocio Diaz Arcela

Richard Aquino crosses his arms and laughs for a photo.

Credit: Rocio Diaz Arcela

Guardians of the sea

Asia supplies 75 per cent of the world’s seafood, with a significant contribution from the Philippines, where premium catches are often processed for export before locals ever taste them. In Manapla, blue swimmer crabs are harvested from dusk until dawn, shelled the same day, then canned for shipment just steps from the shore. “We don’t get to eat these crabs ourselves,” says Richard Aquino, head of the Tortosa Pump Boat Association. “Maybe we will one day, I hope.”

Slow food initiatives across the island support fisherfolk through sustainable practices, fair markets and eco-tourism, such as at the award-winning Suyac Island Mangrove Eco-Park, in Sagay City.

Kiko Torno prepares food.

Credit: Rocio Diaz Arcela

A dish at 7 Hectares is carefully presented on a plate.

Credit: Rocio Diaz Arcela

The founder of sustainable seafood farm 7 Hectares , Kiko Torno transformed barren land into a “self‑healing” aquaculture facility that requires little human input. But his real mission is to educate people about clean fish and sustainable aquaculture. “Our next step is establishing traceability, so consumers and restaurants know the exact time of harvest, the fish’s diet, and when it was processed and shipped,” he adds.

By championing farmers, fisherfolk and artisans, the growing slow food movement opens a pathway for travellers to learn about regenerative, sustainable agriculture and eco‑tourism firsthand – immersing them in journeys that are meaningful as well as delicious, and that help protect the island’s rich biodiversity and food culture.

Huts hide among mangroves out on the water at Suyac Island Mangrove Eco-Park.

Credit: Roberliza Eugenio

How to do a five-day slow food Philippines tour

Within and around Bacolod city, unforgettable culinary experiences await.

Day 1

Fly in from Manila or Cebu, savour Bacolod’s famed grilled chicken inasal, then dine at Lanai by FreshStart.

Day 2

Trek Mount Kanlaon’s coffee trails at Sugar Valley Farm , then master coffee cupping at Coffee Culture Roastery .

Day 3

Have lunch at Pala Pala sa Vito , explore Suyac Island’s mangrove sanctuary and snorkel at Carbin Reef.

Day 4

Craft pure cacao tablea (tablets) at Chris Fadriga Criollo Cacao Nursery & Plantation, then have lunch at Sauma Farm, Bar & Kitchen.

Day 5

Discover Silay’s artisanal treats and take home coconut vinegar and muscovado-filled piaya flatbread.

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