Pamana offers an elevated Filipino dining experience. All dishes are true to its Filipino roots, being heirloom recipes that have supposedly been passed down through generations. At the same time, they are made unique through innovation, and are ambitious in presentation.
Take a favorite of mine, for example: their Crispy Baby Pusit in Black Ink. I have had so much calamari in my life, but this would be the first I've ever had which has the squid'd own black ink incorporated into the crispy batter. How brilliant is that?
And it comes out of the kitchen, presented to you in a small basket lined with aluminum foil, delicately placed inside a tiny cage. How quaint! Totally unnecessary, but I appreciate the effort.
The Pamana space in Quezon City is not the biggest. It is openly attached to another restaurant -- it's sister, Hawaiian BBQ. So you can imagine how sound can bounce off the walls when it gets full. It can get a little loud.
Service can also improve a bit, as they feel a bit undermanned. It's always been difficult to call a server's attention.
But overall, a good experience. Its history can somehow attest to it: its first branches were in Tagaytay and Boracay. It only recently opened in Manila. And for a restaurant to open outside of Manila and eventually make its way there, says a lot about its merits. read more