LIST: Hidden garden restaurants in the north

It’s hard to find breathing space in Metro Manila, primarily because there are hardly any parks or green spaces available. Out of the region’s 63,600 hectares (as reported by the Department of Environment and Natural Resources), the largest nature park, Ninoy Aquino Parks and Wildlife Center, covers only 80 hectares. Nature reserve La Mesa Eco Park, on the other hand, only has 33 hectares.

And while we’re struggling to find green spaces, there is still an ongoing and appalling decrease of public spaces, further limiting the recreational activities and get-togethers we can do outside, including simple ones like having picnics.

(READ: Parks, plazas and other public spaces are vanishing right before our eyes)

Many restaurant owners have noticed this and decided to take action by building their dining areas in scenic hidden gardens. Not only does their location elicit the quaint ambience of picnics, it also block the chaos of the urbanized city. Take a breather in restaurants like that yourself—well, that is if you can find them first. (Note: We won’t reveal specific addresses so you can seek them out in their clandestine locations yourself!)

Gubat

Diliman Bonsai Society, C.P. Garcia Ave., Diliman, Quezon City
Instagram.com/gubat_qc

The entrance to Gubat QC.
Piniritong isda with burong kanin and turmeric iced tea.

It’s almost impossible to see Gubat the first time you pass by C.P. Garcia Ave. Their bamboo door is bordered with plants; a concrete three-step stair leading to the restaurant is the only giveaway. When you step inside, you’ll see a bonsai garden and a restaurant with a beach-like atmosphere. Chairs and tables made of stone, wood, and bamboo occupy the space while an open kitchen blasting Filipino music stands in the middle.

Their menu revolves around Filipino favorites, such as the piniritong isda which they paired with the perfectly salty burong kanin. All of their dishes are fried and served on banana leaf.

Flossom Kitchen + Café

N. Averilla St., Brgy. Sta. Lucia, San Juan City
Instagram.com/flossomkitchencafe
238-5857

Ube champorado. All of Flossom’s dishes are garnished with edible flowers. Photos by Danica Condez

This café-restaurant stands tall on an uphill street of a San Juan neighborhood with its large glass windows that gives diners a pleasing view of the surrounding trees outside. Inside, fresh flowers are found in every nook and cranny—on the walls, roof, tables, and even food. Their offerings give a new spin to comfort dishes like ube champorado, avocado toast, and chori shrimp pizza all topped with edible flowers.

 

Burrow Café

113 Beverly Hills Drive, Beverly Hills Subdivision, Dolores, Taytay
Instagram.com/burrowcafe.ph
0917-6229795

The 19-step staircase leading to the hidden restaurant. Photos by Tricia Guevara
Slow braised pork short ribs with risotto

Under the hills of Antipolo is this 60-seater café and restaurant that has large glass window panels facing a forest where the Tungtong River runs quietly below. Owners of Burrow Café change the menu, which is short and tucked in hardbound copies of classic boooks, every three months to make sure that their customers won’t get used to ordering the same dishes every visit.

Kale Café

Melting Pot Bldg., Omega Ave., Brgy. Greater Fairview, Quezon City
Instagram.com/kalemanila

Banana bread with whipped butter. Photos by Danica Condez
Bibimbap with bacon and vegetables

Tucked in a quaint white building in Fairview is a minimalist café that focuses not on the leafy vegetable kale but on dishes dominated by fruits and vegetables. Two of their bestsellers are the bibimbap which is filled with a myriad of garden vegetables and sweet banana bread along with light amounts of bacon strips.

This story originally appeared on the Northern Living Recalibrate Issue.

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