Bistro Group sparks with local concept
Applies its lessons from foreign franchises to Siklab
THE Conrad S Maison branch of Siklab 鈥 formerly a food hall concept by The Bistro Group 鈥 seems to reflect a new pivot to further develop their homegrown brands. While the franchise of the US restaurant Dave & Buster鈥檚 that they operate at the Opus mall seats 1,500, due to the play area, in terms of dining, this 260- to 290-seater is the biggest outlet of The Bistro Group to date.
大象传媒 went to a preview dinner at Siklab on Jan. 7, tasting their Filipino favorites. We particularly liked their Sinilabang Manok (the word siklab means 鈥渟park,鈥 so it鈥檚 like saying 鈥渟parked chicken鈥), which serves as a version of Bacolod鈥檚 inasal (barbecue), that has a very pronounced hit of lemongrass. Their pancit palabok (a noodle dish) can stand toe-to-toe with anybody鈥檚, while their Pinatisang Manok (chicken cooked with fish sauce) is an almost-perfect clone of a heritage fried chicken dish from another restaurant group. Everybody at the table liked their version of bibingka (a steamed rice cake), fluffy like a cake, topped with muscovado sugar, coconut, salted egg, and cheese.
Guia Abuel, chief operating officer of The Bistro Group, said that they had previously launched local brands Siklab and Krazy Garlik in 2014, but had them shuttered in 2018 due to what they thought was their lack of experience in running local brands. After all, The Bistro Group is known for bringing US restaurant franchises here, such as TGI Friday鈥檚 (their first) and Morton鈥檚 The Steakhouse.
Times have changed, and this Siklab 鈥 its largest 鈥 is the third branch, after their first relaunch in Shangri-La Plaza mall, then a second branch in Cavite鈥檚 Evo City. By the end of the month, Ms. Abuel predicts that they鈥檒l be able to open four more: along Kamagong St. in Makati City, Park Triangle in BGC, Vermosa in Cavite, and at Evia Lifestyle Mall in Las Pi帽as.
鈥淲ith the experience we鈥檝e had through the years, we felt that the company is already prepared to come out with a locally conceptualized restaurant,鈥 she said.
鈥淭he past few years, we鈥檝e seen successes of local Filipino restaurants. I will not name our competitors, but they were an inspiration for us. We have all cuisines already… but we don鈥檛 have a local concept.鈥
One might think that concentrating on mostly foreign flavors in their decades-long history might prove to be a handicap in making something Filipino, but she says that the systematic operations influenced by their Western counterparts helped them build better. 鈥淭hey have a great foundation of standards,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 an American style of service: friendly, generous.
鈥淲e kind of applied these learnings in the way we run our business now, in a homegrown set up,鈥 she said.
On that note, how do they set themselves apart as a Filipino restaurant in the Philippines, counting that most of their experience has been with foreign brands? 鈥淭here are a lot of good local restaurants, but in terms of execution… I think we can be ahead of them.
鈥淲e鈥檙e a matured operator. Of course, food is everything, but it鈥檚 not everything. It鈥檚 the quality of service, the ambiance. It鈥檚 a total package.鈥 鈥 Joseph L. Garcia


