Wednesday, November 2, 2016
Thursday, October 13, 2016
DOST Supports the Cacao Industry Development in Biliran Province
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Chocolate is among the most loved pleasure food in the world. It is considered to create a pleasant “happy feeling” and helps reduce stress to many people who eats and smells it. To some, it serves as an excellent moisturizer and is believed to give skin a healthy glow when used as a massage cream or body scrub. However, according to Switzerland's Barry Callebaut Group, there could be a deficit in chocolate as early as 2020 due to its increasing demand while its raw material supply is decreasing. So, how is this possible?
Chocolate is a product of fermented cocoa or cacao beans. Cocoa or cacao (Theobroma cacao, L) is native to Mexico, Central America and northern South America and has been introduced as a crop in many Asian countries including the Philippines. According to The Washington Post, the norm now is that farmers produces less cocoa than the world eats, thus causing the shortage in chocolates in year 2020.
Have you ever dreamt of indulging yourself into a mouth-watering chocolate cake or truffles as a dessert after a delicious meal? Or imagined treating yourself into a luxurious chocolate spa treatment after a very stressful day? Or probably drinking a cup of hot chocolate while watching the rain drops? Well, guess what? In the year 2020, those dreams and imaginations may no longer become a reality.
Photo taken from http://chh-convest11.blogspot.com (Goodness of Chocolate) |
Chocolate is a product of fermented cocoa or cacao beans. Cocoa or cacao (Theobroma cacao, L) is native to Mexico, Central America and northern South America and has been introduced as a crop in many Asian countries including the Philippines. According to The Washington Post, the norm now is that farmers produces less cocoa than the world eats, thus causing the shortage in chocolates in year 2020.
Thursday, September 1, 2016
GMP and Food Safety Awareness for IMARCO
The DOST Eastern Visayas Food Safety Team (EVFST) through the support of the Provincial S&T Center- Biliran and DAR Provincial Office Leyte-Biliran conducted a two-days training on Food Safety and Good Manufacturing Practices (GMP) to 24 members of the Imelda Agrarian Reform Cooperative (IMARCO) on August 30-31, 2016 at the Brgy. Imelda Multipurpose Center, Naval, Biliran.
The main objective of the activity is to equip the members of the cooperative with skills and knowledge in product development based on standard good manufacturing practices and food safety measures to be able to compete in the current market, thus increasing household income.
Tuesday, August 16, 2016
DOST-FNRI transfers Veggie-bread techs to Biliran MSMEs
How veggie-bread technology came into being was because of two primary reasons.
Firstly, bread, in all its forms, is considered to be the most widely consumed food in several parts of the globe including the Philippines. It has been said that bread is not only an important source of carbohydrates but it is also portable and compact which explains why it has been an integral part of our diet way back 30,000 years ago up to the present. Consumers of bread products cut across different market classes and almost all age brackets, especially in the younger age groups.
Wednesday, July 20, 2016
Phil Sci Opens Application for NCE 2016
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The Philippine
Science High School (PSHS) System is calling all qualified and eligible
graduating Grade 6 pupils to take the National Competitive Examination (NCE) on
October 22, 2016. Attached below is a guide for the processing of Application
Forms.
The PSHS System
is mandated to offer a free scholarship for secondary course with emphasis on
subjects pertaining to science with the end goal of preparing its students for
careers in science and technology and was established by Republic Act 3661.
From the first campus in Diliman, Quezon City in 1963, it has at present
expanded into eleven campuses nationwide. The PSHS- Eastern Visayas Campus is
located at Brgy. Pawing, Palo, Leyte.
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