WELCOME TO CHATEAU DU MER BEACH RESORT

If this is your first time in my site, welcome! Chateau Du Mer is a beach house and a Conference Hall. The beach house could now accommodate 10 guests, six in the main floor and four in the first floor( air conditioned room). In addition, you can now reserve your vacation dates ahead and pay the rental fees via PayPal. I hope to see you soon in Marinduque- Home of the Morions and Heart of the Philippines. The photo above was taken during our first Garden Wedding ceremony at The Chateau Du Mer Gardens. I have also posted my favorite Filipino and American dishes and recipes in this site. Some of the photos and videos on this site, I do not own, but I have no intention on the infringement of your copyrights!

Marinduque Mainland from Tres Reyes Islands

Marinduque Mainland from Tres Reyes Islands
View of Marinduque Mainland from Tres Reyes Islands-Click on photo to link to Marinduque Awaits You

Monday, March 30, 2026

A Journey of Taste- Southeast Asian Cuisine

There is something quietly joyful about discovering a new culture through its food-one plate at a time, one conversation at a time. Recently, my daughter and I embarked on what we now call our “Southeast Asian tasting journey,” an informal but deeply satisfying exploration of flavors across a region rich in history, migration, and memory.

We began, naturally, with what I know best-Filipino cuisine. From there, we moved outward: Vietnamese, then Thai, and just the other day, for the first time in my life, I tasted the food of Myanmar and Laos. Still ahead of us are Indonesia, Malaysia, Cambodia, and Singapore, each one a new chapter waiting to be savored. The other day, Ditas and I savored the spicy Laotian Cuisine. 

Laotian Cuisine: Earthy and Unpretentious
Laos cuisine is perhaps the most understated of the group, yet it is deeply rooted in tradition. Sticky rice is central, eaten by hand and shared. Dishes like larb (a minced meat salad) are bright with lime and herbs, offering a rustic charm that feels both ancient and intimate.

What makes this journey meaningful is not just the food, but the way each cuisine tells a story.

Filipino Cuisine: A Taste of Home and History
Filipino food is a tapestry woven from indigenous roots and centuries of Spanish, Chinese, and American influences. Dishes like adobo and sinigang are not just meals, they are memories. There is always a comforting balance of sour, salty, and savory flavors, often anchored by rice. For me, every bite carries echoes of childhood and homeland.

Vietnamese Cuisine: Freshness and Harmony
Vietnamese food feels almost medicinal in its freshness. Herbs like basil, mint, and cilantro are not garnish, they are central characters. A bowl of pho or a plate of fresh spring rolls reflects a delicate balance of flavors: sweet, sour, salty, and umami. It is light, aromatic, and deeply satisfying without being heavy.

Thai Cuisine: A Symphony of Contrasts
Thai food is bold and expressive. It plays with extremes, spicy and sweet, sour and salty, all in one dish. Whether it’s a fragrant green curry or a plate of pad thai, there is a vibrancy that awakens the senses. Dining on Thai food feels like listening to a well-conducted orchestra where every note insists on being heard.

Burmese (Myanmar) Cuisine: A Quiet Revelation
My first encounter with Burmese cuisine was a pleasant surprise. It is less known, yet deeply complex. There are clear influences from India, China, and Thailand, but the cuisine stands on its own. Dishes often feature fermented tea leaves, lentils, and a wide variety of textures. What struck me most was its subtlety less fiery than Thai, but rich in earthy, nuanced flavors.

And now, we look forward.

Indonesian Cuisine: Depth and Spice
Indonesian food is known for its slow-cooked richness. Think of rendang, a deeply spiced beef dish simmered for hours, or nasi goreng, the beloved fried rice. There is a generous use of spices, clove, nutmeg, turmeric reflecting the country’s historic role in the global spice trade.

Malaysian Cuisine: A Cultural Mosaic
Malaysia offers a beautiful blend of Malay, Chinese, and Indian culinary traditions. Dishes like nasi lemak, with its coconut rice and sambal, capture the essence of the cuisine, layered, aromatic, and communal. Every meal feels like a celebration of diversity.

Cambodian Cuisine: Gentle and Balanced

Cambodian food, while less internationally known, is elegant in its restraint. It is less spicy than Thai but equally flavorful. Amok, a coconut-based curry often steamed in banana leaves, is a highlight, delicate, fragrant, and comforting.

Singaporean Cuisine: A Culinary Crossroads
Singapore is where all these influences converge. It is a place where Chinese, Malay, Indian, and even Western flavors coexist in harmony. Hawker centers offer dishes like Hainanese chicken rice and laksa, each representing a piece of the nation’s multicultural identity.

As my daughter and I continue this journey, I realize that what we are really doing is traveling without leaving our table. Each meal is a passport stamp, each dish a story passed down through generations.

At this stage in life, I find deep satisfaction in these shared experiences, not just in tasting new foods, but in seeing the world through my daughter’s eyes, one cuisine at a time.

And so, our journey continues, one country, one dish, one memory after another.



Meanwhile, here's the AI Overview
A journey through Southeast Asian cuisine 
reveals a vibrant, layered, and diverse culinary landscape, blending fresh ingredients, aromatic herbs, and bold flavors like hot, sour, and salty. From Vietnam's savory pho to Malaysia's complex, cross-cultural dishes and Thailand's aromatic curries, food is a, cultural cornerstone that brings communities together.
Key Culinary Destinations & Dishes
  • Vietnam: Renowned for fresh street food like Pho, with aromatic, fresh herbs and delicate broths.
  • Thailand: Famous for its fiery, aromatic green curries and rich, complex dishes, particularly in northern cities like Chiang Mai.
  • Malaysia: Offers a unique, layered mix of Malay, Chinese, and Indian influences, featuring street food favorites like satay and nasi lemak.
  • Indonesia: Known for rich, flavorful dishes including Rendang (slow-cooked beef in coconut milk) and spicy sambals.
  • Laos: Known for the use of sticky rice as a staple, alongside dishes like Laap (minced meat salad) and fiery green papaya salads.
Common Threads in the Journey
  • Street Food Culture: Street food serves as a social connector, with bustling, open-air markets offering accessible, diverse dishes.
  • Signature Flavors: The cuisine is often characterized by the balance of hot (chili), sour (lime), and salty (fish sauce) flavors.
  • Core Ingredients: Rice, noodles, fresh herbs (cilantro, mint, basil), lemongrass, ginger, and coconut milk form the foundation of many dishes.
Immersive Experiences
  • Cookery Classes: Hands-on classes in places like Chiang Mai offer insight into the traditional cooking techniques and ingredient balancing.
  • Culinary Tours: Guided walking tours in cities like Kuala Lumpur and Hanoi offer a deep dive into local, authentic street food.
  • Street Markets: Exploring, lively, crowded night markets is an essential way to experience the local culture and flavors.
This culinary journey,, often referred to as "Hot, Sour, Salty, Sweet," highlights the region's diverse yet harmonious food traditions, offering an unforgettable experience for every food lover.

Lastly, My Photo of the Day: Grand Daughter Alix Katague Quinn and Me


Isabel Rosario Cooper- McArthur Mistress-An Update


When she was 16, General MacArthur brought her to America as his secret mistress then paid her to disappear when scandal threatened his career.
Manila, Philippines, 1930.


Isabel Rosario Cooper, known as "Dimples," was a young, talented actress and dancer in Manila’s entertainment scene. Barely 16, she was already captivating audiences with her beauty and grace. Across the world, Douglas MacArthur, 50, the commanding general of U.S. forces in the Philippines, was a man of enormous power, commanding armies, recently separated from his wife, and in a position of absolute influence.
When they met, Isabel was just a teenager and MacArthur was an older, powerful figure. He began a secret relationship with her, one that he kept hidden from his family and the public. When MacArthur was reassigned to Washington D.C. in 1930, he brought Isabel with him, but discreetly. He set her up in a private apartment, keeping her hidden away, out of sight from everyone, including his influential mother. Isabel’s life became a shadowed existence, dependent on MacArthur emotionally and financially, unable to pursue her career, and kept out of the public eye for four years.
Then, in 1934, journalist Drew Pearson uncovered the relationship. The ensuing scandal threatened MacArthur’s career. He responded by suing Pearson for libel. However, as the case progressed, undeniable proof of the affair came to light letters, financial records, and other evidence that showed MacArthur had maintained a relationship with a much younger Filipina woman in secret.
To avoid further damage to his reputation, MacArthur settled quickly and made Isabel an offer. He would pay her $15,000-an enormous sum in 1934, if she would leave Washington and vanish from his life. Isabel, left with few options, accepted the money. She didn’t return to the Philippines, but instead moved to Los Angeles in search of a new life, hoping to revive her acting career.
Hollywood, however, was unwelcoming to a Filipina actress in the 1930s. Roles for women like her were limited and often degrading. Isabel struggled to find work, and her dreams of a successful career were slowly crushed under the weight of her past relationship with MacArthur. Meanwhile, MacArthur’s career flourished. He married Jean Faircloth in 1937, and by World War II, he was one of the most famous generals in American history.
Isabel’s struggles continued in relative obscurity. She lived for 26 years in the shadow of MacArthur’s glory, her own dreams unfulfilled. On February 14, 1960, at the age of 46, Isabel died by suicide in Los Angeles.
The newspapers that reported her death referred to her primarily as “MacArthur’s former companion.” Even in death, she was defined by her relationship with him.
Isabel’s life was marked by power dynamics that consumed her future. She was 16 when she met MacArthur, and from that moment, her fate became intertwined with his. She had dreams of acting, but her relationship with one of the most powerful men in the world forced her into a life of dependence and silence.
This story is not just about a scandal involving a powerful man. It’s a story of exploitation of a young woman used, discarded, and forgotten. MacArthur continued to climb in stature, his reputation intact, while Isabel faded into obscurity, unable to escape the past.
Isabel Rosario Cooper was more than MacArthur’s secret mistress. She was a talented young woman whose career was ruined by a power imbalance she could not control. Her struggles and ultimate death should remind us of the real cost of these power dynamics of how young women are still often exploited and discarded by powerful men.
Isabel’s life mattered. Her dreams mattered. And she deserves to be remembered with dignity, not as just a footnote in someone else’s story.

  • Historical Significance: Her life has been analyzed in studies such as Empire’s Mistress, Starring Isabel Rosario Cooper by Vernadette Vicuña Gonzalez, which examines her story through the lens of personal experiences within U.S. imperialism, says the University of Hawaii System.

One Liner Jokes on Aging

There are moments in life when wisdom arrives not in long speeches or carefully crafted essays, but in a single line, quick, sharp, and gone before you even have time to analyze it. The other day, a fellow resident here in our senior community( EG) posed a question that perfectly captured this truth:

“What do you call a camel without a hump?”

I paused, as one does, searching for a clever or perhaps philosophical answer.

“Humphrey.”

I admit, I laughed longer than the joke deserved. Or perhaps exactly as long as it deserved.

At this stage in my life, I have come to appreciate the quiet brilliance of the one-liner. In my younger years, during my professional days, through my time of public service, and even in the serious aftermath of national events, I was surrounded by complexity. Decisions were rarely simple, conversations rarely brief, and humor, when it appeared, was often buried beneath layers of responsibility.

But now, in this chapter of reflection and observation, I find that a well-placed one-liner can carry the same weight as a paragraph and sometimes more.

Consider a few that have stood the test of time:

“I told my doctor I broke my arm in two places. He told me to stop going to those places.”

“I used to think I was indecisive, but now I’m not so sure.”

“Age is something that doesn’t matter… unless you are a cheese.”

Each of these, like “Humphrey,” works because it surprises us. It nudges the mind in one direction, then gently pulls it away at the last moment. In that brief instant, we are reminded that life does not always have to be taken so seriously.

Living in a senior community has heightened my awareness of these small exchanges. Conversations in the hallway, at dinner, or during shared activities often carry these little sparks of humor. They are not grand performances, just passing remarks that linger longer than expected. And perhaps that is why they matter.

As we age, we accumulate stories, some joyful, some difficult, many complex. But humor has a way of distilling those experiences into something lighter, something shareable. A one-liner is, in many ways, the final edited version of a lifetime of observation.

I sometimes think that our appreciation for these jokes deepens with time. When we are young, we chase big laughs. As we grow older, we savor the quiet chuckle, the knowing smile, the moment of connection when someone else “gets it.”

Reaching two million page views on this blog is, to me, both humbling and gratifying. When I first began writing in 2009, I did not imagine that my reflections on life, history, food, and personal experience would travel so far and touch so many readers around the world. And yet here we are.

Perhaps that is why I feel comfortable sharing something as simple as a one-liner. Because behind every short joke is a long life of experiences, observations, and lessons learned.

So I leave you with one more, in the spirit of keeping things brief:

“I have reached an age where my train of thought often leaves the station without me.”

If you smiled, even slightly, then you understand exactly what I mean.

And if not-well, there is always Humphrey.

My Photo of the Day:


Finally, here are five of the biggest news items today, March 30, 2026:

  1. The Iran conflict is escalating, with U.S. forces and President Trump weighing tougher action against Iran’s energy infrastructure.

  2. TSA officers are finally expected to get back pay today after the DHS funding crisis left many working without pay.

  3. The DHS shutdown and funding standoff remain unresolved, with the House and Senate still at odds.

  4. Artemis II is back in the spotlight, with NASA’s crew mission to the moon getting major coverage today.

  5. Trump also unveiled plans for a new White House ballroom, another headline from today’s U.S. political coverage.



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