CAVITE CITY — The Cavite City Public Market sizzled with creativity and local pride as young culinary talents faced off in the Dampa Cooking Competition, part of the 30th Regada Water Festival. The event celebrated the city's rich food heritage while pushing the next generation to reimagine classic Caviteño dishes for modern palates.
A Stage for Young Caviteño Chefs
The competition gathered aspiring cooks from across the city, each bringing their own interpretation of time‑honored recipes. Contestants were challenged to recreate traditional Caviteño classics while also crafting a modern vianda that reflected their personal culinary style. The market setting kept the competition grounded in the everyday food culture of the city.
Judges evaluated each dish on authenticity, creativity, and presentation, rewarding those who struck a delicate balance between honoring tradition and introducing fresh ideas. The young chefs moved through their stations with focused energy, their hands confidently working with local ingredients sourced directly from market stalls. Spectators watched as family recipes passed down through generations were reimagined before their eyes.
The competition carried deeper significance as a cultural preservation effort. Traditional Caviteño cuisine, with its Spanish influences and coastal flavors, faces the slow erosion of time as older generations pass on. Events like Dampa ensure that the unique tastes of the city are not lost but instead handed to capable young hands ready to carry them forward.
More Than a Cooking Contest
The Dampa Cooking Competition is a cornerstone of the Regada Water Festival, which marks its 30th anniversary in 2026. The festival derives its name from the Spanish word meaning "to water" or "to sprinkle," a reference to the feast of St. John the Baptist. The competition injects culinary arts into the celebration, proving that heritage is best experienced through all five senses.
Mayor Denver Chua, Vice Mayor Raleigh Rusit, and the Sangguniang Panlungsod threw their full support behind the event, recognizing its power to boost local commerce. The venue inside the public market was a deliberate choice, giving visibility to local vendors and producers who supply the ingredients that define Caviteño cooking. Committee chairpersons Councilors Mau Lu, Marrian Pinzon, Emily Tirona, and Jet Barrera oversaw the competition's smooth execution.
Public Market Officer Beck Dela Cruz and the Mercado del Ciudad Office ensured that the event ran without disruption to daily market operations. Brand sponsor Brent Gas provided additional support, marking a meaningful partnership between the private sector and the city's cultural initiatives. The collaboration demonstrated that food heritage can be both a cultural celebration and an economic driver for local communities.
The Regada Festival's 30‑Year Legacy
Since its establishment in 1996, the Regada Water Festival has grown into one of Cavite's most anticipated celebrations. The festival's centerpiece is the Paulan sa Kalye, where massive water sprinklers drench thousands of dancing residents along P. Burgos Avenue. The Basayawan sa Kalye transforms the streets into a giant dance floor, blending the joy of water with the rhythm of live drums.
The Dampa Cooking Competition adds a flavorful dimension to this predominantly aquatic celebration. As the festival enters its fourth decade, the inclusion of culinary arts signals an evolving appreciation for the many ways Caviteños express their identity. The young chefs who competed are now part of that living tradition, having proven that the flavors of the historic city by the bay are in good hands.









