Team Red Horse was starting to feel lazy (thanks to our lovely
staycation at Le Monet Hotel, their good food and the endless videoke and beer
nights) that we needed some alternate plans
to get us all out of the hotel and explore. We were at Camp John Hay and never
left the hotel for almost two days. And then someone mentioned Choco-Late de
Batirol just a few minutes away from our refuge, everybody started to strip off
their jammies.
It was late afternoon in Baguio and everyone seemed to be on their
minutes-after-waking moods and someone perked us up by mentioning a quick visit
to a happy chocolate place nearby. It will be my first time.
Traversing the winding road inside the Camp John Hay on Le Monet Hotel’s
Electronic Jeep, we found this chill place tucked in the middle of nowhere, this
unassuming café was loaded with tourists and locals having their afternoon tsokolate break. We queued for some time
before settling ourselves into one of the cabana-type native huts at back of
the café.
Everyone’s excited for their hot chocolates but me. I love caffeine more
than cocoa.
And then the madness started as soon as the hot tsokolates arrived (Traditional Blend - 90 Pesos). I tried it and realized that it wasn’t the hot
chocolate I was thinking. It was thick, not that sweet and very satisfying (my
happy hormones were starting to kick in). And then the owner’s daughter-in-law
noticed how everyone was raving about it. She silently went to our hut and
offered to show us how the tsokolate is
prepared.
First important lesson was that their version is made from cocoa paste,
not tablea, which makes it thicker
than the usual hot chocolates (leaving some remnants in your cups afterwards).
The hot drinks were complemented by bibingka
(105 Pesos), turon de langka (85 Pesos)
and suman sa lihia (64 pesos). It was
a feast.
I ditched my caffeine that afternoon and gave cocoa with love a try, not a bad decision after all.
I ditched my caffeine that afternoon and gave cocoa with love a try, not a bad decision after all.
Choco-Late de Batirol
Igorot Park, Camp John Hay, Baguio City
Contact Numbers: (+63) 916.375.6510 | (+63) 915.933.3474
Open Hours: 8:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. on weekdays | 7:00 a.m. to 10:00 p.m.
on weekends
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