The Lamp on Enriquez
Small light, small room, eighty pitches answered with one.
Tucked into a quiet side street in Poblacion — Makati's noisy, neon-drenched nightlife district — Lampara is the kind of room you almost miss until its softly glowing sign pulls you in. The name means lamp in Filipino, and that is precisely the conceit: a small light cast on a cuisine its founders believed deserved a brighter global stage.
The restaurant opened in December 2018, the brainchild of childhood friends RJ Ramos (from Samar) and Alphonse Sotero (from Iloilo), later joined by Prince Tan of Nueva Ecija. Sotero, who had cooked at the Ritz-Carlton in the United States, came home asking a pointed question: why was Filipino food booming abroad but barely celebrated at the fine end of its own capital? Out of eighty concepts pitched to the landlord of a Poblacion walk-up, Lampara was the one chosen.
The trio call it a "Neo-Filipino Bistro" — classical French technique laced through heritage Filipino flavor, deliberately approachable rather than white-tablecloth grand. In November 2025, that quiet confidence was rewarded when the inaugural MICHELIN Guide Manila & Cebu 2026 awarded Lampara a Bib Gourmand, citing its "ingredient-led dishes" and "quietly confident" reinvention of the canon.











