We’re pretty sure that in Metro Manila, Japan will soon be synonymous to delicious desserts.
A few months after we were introduced to Kumori’s delicious
palm-sized cheesecakes, comes another Japanese classic: Paper Moon Café
and its mille crepes.
Paper Moon recently opened at the ground level of Glorietta 3 in Makati and at the fourth floor of Trinoma in Quezon City.
At the Glorietta location, the Japanese Wabi Sabi concept seems to be
at play. The 12-table cafe sits right smack in the middle of the mall: a
little unfinished, a bit incomplete, and with just a cordon defining
its space. It almost feels as if it’s impermanent, and waiting only for
the actual physical shop to finish construction so it can transfer its
fabulousness.
But these details will begin to fade as you bite into a slice of
Paper Moon’s mille crepe (P220 a slice). Twenty layers of paper-thin
crepe are put together by the lightest of pastry cream, the top layer of
which is torched to a golden caramelized crust.
That’s actually European by way of Japan. The woman behind Paper Moon
is actually the same woman behind the acclaimed New York Lady M
Boutique: Madame Emy Wada.
Madame Emy was taught by her Austrian mother-in-law the European way
of desserts. So can you imagine the Paper Moon experience now: Japanese
precision applied to European decadence?
She’s been baking since the '70s, supplying seven of the 10 best
cafes in Tokyo. She noticed the cafes she’s been supplying is
consistently in the best list, so in 1985, she opened Paper Moon.
A little later on, she reached New York, opening and founding Lady M.
She unfortunately had to give that up to focus on her operations back
in Asia. Finally, she’s at our doorstep.
Apart from the usual Paper Moon offerings, Paper Moon Philippines
features the mango variant of the famous mille crepe. The mango mille
crepe (P220 a slice) can only be found in the Philippines, a good enough
reason for mille crepe fanatics to come over.
We were pleasantly surprise at how good the mango mille crepe is:
thin mango slices are put on top of the pastry cream found between the
crepe, adding just a touch of sweetness and a whole new flavor
dimension. It’s very refreshing and we highly recommend it.
A large cake is P2,000. A medium is P1,400. A mini is P350. A slice is P220.
10am-9pm. G/F Glorietta 3, Ayala Center, Makati; 10am-9pm 4/F Trinoma, Quezon City.
This article was originally published on the Coconuts Manila website.
source: www.abs-cbnnews.com