Chateau Du Mer Beach House and Conference Hall
A Seaside Paradise owned by Filipino-American Retirees(David Balleza Katague & Macrine Nieva Jambalos)Boac,Marinduque, Philippines
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!
Wednesday, November 5, 2025
The Filipino Sinigang- Tourist Spots in the Philippines
This year Special Filipino Dinner has taught me a few lessons. Filipino Food is still not as popular as the Asian cuisine. A few of my Fellow seniors asked me, Is Filipino Food Spicy? One thing I accomplished this week as a blogger was to educate and sometimes even inspire other through my daily Blogs; I have accomplished this and feel very
happy about it. May you continue reading my daily blogs. Again, your comments is very much appreciated.
“THE BEST SOUP IN THE WORLD (Sinigang)”, 2021
“The Filipino soup sinigang was named the #1 soup in the world in the TasteAtlas 2021 Awards. It received a rating of 4.63 out of 5 stars, beating other international soups like the Romanian Ciorbă de fasole cu afumătură. TasteAtlas recognized sinigang for its unique sour and savory flavor, which comes from a souring agent like tamarind.
• Recognition: Sinigang was voted the best soup in the world by the international food database, TasteAtlas, during its 2021 Awards.
• Flavor profile: It is described as a sour and savory soup known for its tangy kick, which can be adjusted based on regional or personal preference.
• Souring agents: The distinct sourness is often achieved using fruits like tamarind, but other ingredients like unripe mango, guava, or calamansi can also be used.
• Ingredients: A typical sinigang includes a sour broth with vegetables and a protein such as pork, beef, shrimp, or fish.
• Cultural significance: It is a staple comfort food in Filipino households, often served with rice and enjoyed on special occasions.” -
“Sinigang is a comforting sour Filipino soup that is a mix of your chosen protein, vegetables, and a souring agent–typically tamarinds. There is a variety of methods that you can cook sinigang using other sour ingredients like Biasong, (Citrus hystrix var. micrantha), Batwan (Garcinia binucao), Calamansi, and Kamias (Averrhoa bilimbi, or bilimbi).
Celebrated for its coral reefs, limestone cliffs, and white-sand beaches, Palawan is also home to the UNESCO-listed Puerto Princesa Subterranean River National Park.
Topping the list this year is Paros, Greece, followed by other world-renowned destinations including Bali, Maldives, Fiji, and the Galápagos Islands.
Travel+Leisure World’s Best Islands 2025 (Top 10):
Tuesday, November 4, 2025
Democrats Rebuke Trump with Wins in CA, NYC, NJ & VA-Longest Government Shutdown
California voters approved Proposition 50, a constitutional amendment that gives the state Legislature control over congressional redistricting (for elections through 2030) instead of the independent commission that previously handled it. AP News+2CalMatters+2
The measure passed by a wide margin, early returns showed around ~65% support. CalMatters+1
The change is explicitly aimed at shifting several currently Republican-held districts in California to give Democrats a better chance of winning them in the 2026 midterms. Newsweek+1
California voters approved Proposition 50, a constitutional amendment that gives the state Legislature control over congressional redistricting (for elections through 2030) instead of the independent commission that previously handled it. AP News+2CalMatters+2
The measure passed by a wide margin, early returns showed around ~65% support. CalMatters+1
The change is explicitly aimed at shifting several currently Republican-held districts in California to give Democrats a better chance of winning them in the 2026 midterms. Newsweek+1
Why it matters
This is framed as a major political victory for Newsom and California Democrats, not just locally but nationally. It signals an active response to redistricting efforts by Republicans in other states (notably Texas) that aim to secure more House seats. The Washington Post+1
For Newsom personally, it boosts his profile as a national Democratic leader and could help if he seeks higher office. The Washington Post+1
Practically, the new districts could allow Democrats to flip up to five U.S. House seats in California. CalMatters+1
This is framed as a major political victory for Newsom and California Democrats, not just locally but nationally. It signals an active response to redistricting efforts by Republicans in other states (notably Texas) that aim to secure more House seats. The Washington Post+1
For Newsom personally, it boosts his profile as a national Democratic leader and could help if he seeks higher office. The Washington Post+1
Practically, the new districts could allow Democrats to flip up to five U.S. House seats in California. CalMatters+1
Criticisms & risks
Some good-government and reform advocates argue that putting redistricting back into legislative hands undermines the independent commission model, which was meant to reduce partisan gerrymandering. CalMatters+1
Opponents see this as a “power grab” and worry about fewer checks on map-drawing. The Washington Post
There is no guarantee that the newly drawn maps will result in the targeted flips; external factors (candidate quality, national mood, local turnout) will still matter. CBS News
Some good-government and reform advocates argue that putting redistricting back into legislative hands undermines the independent commission model, which was meant to reduce partisan gerrymandering. CalMatters+1
Opponents see this as a “power grab” and worry about fewer checks on map-drawing. The Washington Post
There is no guarantee that the newly drawn maps will result in the targeted flips; external factors (candidate quality, national mood, local turnout) will still matter. CBS News
What to watch going forward
How the new maps are drawn: The specific boundaries and how aggressively they shift voters will be key.
Legal and political pushback: Expect scrutiny and possibly lawsuits challenging the maps and the process.
2026 mid-term results in California: Whether Democrats actually secure the promised seats will test how effective the maps are.
The broader national redistricting “arms race”: With this move by California, expect other states both red and blue to consider similar strategies. CalMatters
How the new maps are drawn: The specific boundaries and how aggressively they shift voters will be key.
Legal and political pushback: Expect scrutiny and possibly lawsuits challenging the maps and the process.
2026 mid-term results in California: Whether Democrats actually secure the promised seats will test how effective the maps are.
The broader national redistricting “arms race”: With this move by California, expect other states both red and blue to consider similar strategies. CalMatters
Meanwhile, here's a write-up on last night major Democratic wins in NYC, NJ & VA
There are a number of interesting take-aways from the wins of Zohran Mamdani in New York City, plus the Democratic gubernatorial victories in New Jersey and Virginia. Here’s the breakdown of what they mean and what challenges and signals they send.
✅ What the wins suggest
1. Message around cost of living / economic issues gaining traction
In NYC, Mamdani ran on a platform focused heavily on affordability: rent freezes, free transit buses, city-owned grocery stores. TIME+3Al Jazeera+3PBS+3 That aligns with similar themes in NJ and VA, where the Democratic candidates emphasized pragmatic issues like infrastructure, cost burdens, middle-class pressures rather than purely ideological or national culture war themes. TIME+2AP News+2
So one takeaway: In a period when national politics are often polarized and directional, voters in some places may be responding to local/regional campaigns that are rooted in “bread-and-butter” issues.
2. A challenge (or opportunity) to the Democratic coalition
Mamdani’s win in NYC, coming from a progressive, democratic socialist background, and defeating a far more established former governor (Andrew Cuomo) in the primary signals that the Democratic base (and particularly younger voters and those in urban areas) are open to a different‐kind of message. ABC News+1
On the other hand, the NJ/VA wins show successful candidates who pitched themselves in more centrist or pragmatic ways (e.g., NJ’s Mikie Sherrill). TIME+1
Thus: the Democratic Party may be showing internal flexibility or multiple pathways, progressive wave in urban core + moderate/centrist appeal in statewide contests.
3. Implications for 2026 (mid-term/next cycle)
These victories will be seen as morale boosts for Democrats ahead of 2026. The fact that Democrats held or flipped in key contests suggests the party isn’t dead in swing or changing areas. The NJ win marks three consecutive terms for Democrats in the governorship there, which historically has been harder to sustain. CBS News+1
And the Virginia win is historic (first woman governor of VA) and flips the governorship back to Democratic control. AP News So the message going into 2026: pay attention, turnout, candidate quality, local context matter.
But there are caveats and risks
1. Scale & context matter
Mamdani's win is very significant in NYC, but NYC is extremely Democratic in registration and voter base; the dynamics there are very different from many states or suburban/rural regions. So while it signals a trend, it may not translate everywhere. Likewise, the wins in NJ/VA may reflect particular local factors (candidate strength, opposition weakness) rather than a sweeping national Democratic resurgence.
2. Internal tensions for Democrats
Mamdani’s win triggered concerns among some moderates and business‐oriented Democrats in NYC. Some business leaders and moderate Democrats openly expressed discomfort with his policy proposals and ideological orientation. ABC News This tension means that the Democratic Party will continue to grapple with its identity: How progressive? How moderate? In what geographies does each model succeed?
3. Opposition strategy & national headwinds
Even in these wins, the opposition (Republicans or non‐traditional challengers) will re‐tool. For instance in NJ, the GOP invested heavily; the fact Democrats won doesn’t guarantee future races will be so easy. And national headwinds, economic malaise, unpopular federal policies, external crises can shift the environment quickly. Turnout remains critical. A win in a favourable cycle might look different in a less favourable one.
The Overall take
In short: these wins are good news for Democrats, especially in terms of morale, seeing that different Democratic strategies can work, and that voters are still responsive to affordability and pragmatic issues rather than just partisan identity.
However, they should be taken as signals, not guarantees. Democrats will need to continue adapting:
crafting messages that resonate at the local level, especially around cost‐of living, economic security, everyday concerns.
selecting candidates who can both mobilize base and appeal to swing/independent voters.
managing internal party cohesion between progressive wings and moderates.
preparing for tougher cycles, 2026 will likely be more challenging than 2025 in many ways.
From the Republican/opposition side: they’ll analyze what gave Democrats successes here (cost messaging + candidate strength + turnout) and attempt to counter accordingly.
Finally, this is the 36th Day Government Shutdown-Longest in History. Here's an Update
Here’s where things stand with the ongoing U.S. federal government shutdown (on Day 36) and what it means:
Key Facts & Context
The federal government shutdown began on October 1, 2025 at 12:01 a.m. EDT, after Congress failed to pass the necessary appropriations. Wikipedia+2The White House+2
As of today (Day 36), this is now the longest federal government shutdown in U.S. history, surpassing the 35-day shutdown of December 2018–January 2019. The Guardian+2ABC News+2
The core impasse:
The Republican-controlled House passed a stopgap funding bill, but the ■ ■ Senate has repeatedly rejected it. ABC News+1
Democrats in the Senate are refusing to support funding unless the bill includes extensions of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) tax subsidies, which are set to expire at the end of 2025. The Guardian+1
The President has said he will not negotiate until the government reopens and has called the Democrats’ demands “extortion”. euronews+1
Impacts & Risks
Federal workers: Hundreds of thousands are furloughed (~700,000) and another similar number are working without pay. The Guardian
Economic cost: The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) estimates up to $14 billion in lost GDP if the shutdown lasts 6-8 weeks. Xinhua Net+1
Programs & services:
The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) and other benefit programs are under strain; there’s official acknowledgment that contingency funds may be exhausted, leading to reduced benefits. CBS News
The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) warns of severe staffing shortages among air traffic controllers and other air-travel support personnel, raising the possibility of closing portions of U.S. airspace if things worsen. Reuters+1
Back-pay uncertainty: The administration is signaling that over 650,000 furloughed workers might not receive retroactive pay once the shutdown ends, which contradicts prior norms. The Washington Post
Why It’s Stalled
Senate rules require 60 votes to pass the Continuing Resolution (CR) in the Senate. Democrats are holding out for ACA subsidy language; Republicans want a “clean” CR. No deal so far. CBS News+1
The House has effectively been in recess and hasn’t signalled willingness to add the demanded subsidies. The Guardian+1
Political posturing: each side is framing the others as responsible, which complicates compromise.
What to Watch For
Whether a vote in the Senate breaks the 60-vote barrier on a CR or funding bill.
Whether the House will be reconvened and tries to amend its bill (or pass a new one) including ACA subsidies.
Whether the Administration or agencies will announce service suspensions/critical staffing failures (especially in aviation, food aid, benefits).
Public & political pressure: as more federal workers miss paychecks and as services degrade, pressure may build to a deal.
Economic ripple effects: small business, contractors, large programs may begin to feel bigger strain if shutdown persists beyond several weeks.
Summary
In short: The U.S. federal government is now in its 36th day of shutdown, the longest ever. The stalemate centers on health-care subsidies and budget/continuing resolution language. The effects are broadening: from federal employee pay to benefits programs, from economic output to air travel safety. Unless either side backs down or a compromise is reached, the shutdown risks deeper fallout.
“Onoda: 10,000 Nights in the Jungle.” and the Magellan Movie
While looking For Old Movies, I discovered this Gem:
During the final months of World War II, Lieutenant Hiroo Onoda was stationed on Lubang Island in the Philippines and given orders to defend the territory until reinforcements arrived.
Despite repeated attempts to inform him the war was over, Onoda dismissed all news as enemy propaganda.
His existence was only confirmed in 1974 when traveler Norio Suzuki tracked him down.
Onoda surrendered only when his former commanding officer personally relieved him of duty.
Upon returning to Japan, he was greeted as a hero, capturing international attention and symbolizing extreme loyalty and resilience.
His incredible story inspired a bestselling memoir and a critically acclaimed film, “Onoda: 10,000 Nights in the Jungle.”
Onoda: 10,000 Nights in the Jungle(Japanese: ONODA 一万夜を越えて, Hepburn: Onoda: Ichiman'ya o Koete; lit."Onoda: Over ten thousand nights", French: Onoda, 10 000 nuits dans la jungle) is a 2021 war drama film directed by Arthur Harari and co-written with Vincent Poymiro, with the collaboration of Bernard Cendron. It is inspired by the life of Hiroo Onoda (Yuya Endo) a Japanese soldier who refused to believe that World War II had ended and continued to fight on a remote Philippine island until 1974.
It is an international co-production between France, Japan, Germany, Belgium, Italy, and Cambodia. And was particularly inspired by Cendron and Gérard Chenu's 1974 biography Onoda, seul en guerre dans la jungle, Cendron's archives, and Harari's conversations with the author. Harari did not base it on Onoda's own memoir; he considers the film to be fiction inspired by history rather than a biographical book.The film had its world premiere at the Un Certain Regard section of the 2021 Cannes Film Festival, on 7 July 2021. It was theatrically released in France on 21 July 2021, and in Japan on 8 October 2021. It was received with critical acclaim, winning Best Original Screenplay at the 47th César Awards.
Critical reception
On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 97% of 35 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 7.70/10. The website's consensus reads: "With absorbing patience and palpable empathy, Onoda: 10,000 Nights in the Jungle finds poignant drama in one real-life soldier's stubborn pursuit of honor." Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 78 out of 100, based on 12 critics, indicating "generally favorable" reviews.
On RogerEbert.com, Ben Kenigsburg writes: "Technically, "Onoda"... is a biopic, but it never plays like one. This austere, bleak, occasionally even darkly funny film is, at nearly three hours, more like an absurdist slow burn." James Lattimer, writing for Sight and Sound, called it "...a nearly three-hour wannabe existentialist war drama intended as an exercise in the sort of big-screen immersion that has been impossible of late... [T]he film's humdrum dramatization lacks the necessary visual or narrative finesse to keep viewers absorbed."
Accolades
The film won the Prix Louis-Delluc for 2021. At the 11th Magritte Awards, it received a nomination in the category of Best Foreign Film in Coproducti
The Movie is free from TUBI.. It's quite long almost 3 hours, It may be boring to those people whose lives were not directly affected by the Japanese-American War in the Philippines, 1941-1945. But to me, it is nostalgia time again,
My Food For Thought for Today:
https://www.facebook.com/reel/4084237285150626
Lastly, The Movie-Magellan
#LavDiaz’s film “Magellan”, the Philippines’ official Oscars entry for Best International Feature Film, won the Golden Spike (Best Picture) at the 70th Valladolid International Film Festival (SEMINCI) in Spain.
It shared the top honor with Kelly Reichardt’s “The Mastermind.” The jury praised “Magellan” for its powerful reimagining of colonial history, stunning visuals, and bold storytelling that connects the past with the present.
The Film Academy of the Philippines celebrated the win, calling it a proud moment for Filipino cinema. The movie, starring Gael García Bernal as Ferdinand Magellan and Ronnie Lazaro as Rajah Humabon, premiered at Cannes 2025 before its release in the Philippines.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)









