Barrio Fiesta Philippines-A Food Manufacturing Corporation
Turning Barrio Fiesta Restaurant into a Food Corporation
Barrio Fiesta Restaurant or better known as Barrio Fiesta Restaurant and Food Manufacturing Corporation Philippines used to be just a plain old native restaurant that had its first original restaurant established back in 1958. It grew from a few branches in the Philippines, now it has a lot more to offer catering to all sorts of Filipino native and out of the country food with so many branches and has outlasted other big restaurants in the country. Barrio Fiesta Restaurant now has other branches out side of the country particularly in the United States.
Exporting Popular Local Philippine Products
Barrio Fiesta Restaurant Philippines became BFMC or Barrio Fiesta Food Manufacturing Corporation by the sheer need to cater to feed Filipinos higher quality food served in their tables. It was back in 1987 that they literally became a Food Corporation and from there they grew to making canned goods which they also serve freshly cooked in their restaurants all over the country. They came to export Philippine products like sauteed shrimp paste (locally called as the “bagoong”),a very popular local Filipino food that is common in the tables of the masses since the old age I cannot trace back anymore.
Growing A Locally Made Philippine Product
All this started when they introduced the canned meals in 1997 and from there, Barrio Fiesta Restaurant grew to an export quality processing company that exports Philippine products to some popular patron countries like Hong Kong, Japan, Canada Korea and the United States.They were able to grow the variety of their most popular sauteed shrimp paste “bagoong” from a single flavor to 3 distinct varieties, the sweet, spicy and the regular tasting one.
Proudly Philippine Made Products Distribution
Today, Barrio Fiesta (BFMC) is distributing other popular canned meal products in the Philippines like the bopis, dinuguan, binagoongan baboy, patis, suka, the red and green chili peppers, macapuno, sweetened white beans, sweet kaong ang some pureed juices like mango, guyabano and the local citrus calamansi. They also distributed locally some snack foods and a few chosen frozen chosen items in their list of popular Philippine products.

