The Filipino American Students’ Association (FASA) welcomed Halloween a few days early with their annual Halo-Halloween event. The Douglass Community Kitchen buzzed with students on Saturday afternoon, all eager to create their own variations of the Filipino Halo-Halo dessert.

“Halo-Halo is a popular Filipino dessert that I think perfectly captures our culture,” said FASA Internal President Lindsey Medalla, a junior. Made with shaved ice, ice cream, evaporated milk, fruits, and other ingredients, Halo-Halo combines many tropical flavors.

“The atmosphere is very relaxing and friendly,” first-year Katie Karabetsos said. The FASA members hung the national flag of the Philippines on the wall of the Community Kitchen and filled the room with festive Halloween decorations. Conversation and Halloween music were present throughout the event.

There was a wide range of ingredients available on the counter, including the aforementioned ice cream and evaporated milk, as well as saba (plantains), leche flan, red beans, mais (corn), macapuno (soft coconut), and sugar calm fruit. “It’s like ice cream with a refreshing Asian twist,” first-year Vidit Katyal said.

FASA was established in 2004 to promote the spirit of Filipino culture on campus. The club hosts many food-related events throughout the school year to highlight the importance of food in many Asian cultures.

This year, Halo-Halloween may have been successful to a fault — in the end, it was so popular that many of the ingredients ran out.

Tagged: FASA Halloween


With Halo-Halloween, FASA celebrates with a Filipino dessert

“A whole civilization will die tonight.” Donald Trump’s post to his social media platform Truth Social April 7 marks what some would say is a departure from sanity, prompting calls from either side of the aisle to invoke the 25 Amendment and impeach him. Read More

With Halo-Halloween, FASA celebrates with a Filipino dessert

Beer started his track and field career in his junior year of high school. “My friends were on the track and field team in high school and I thought I’d give it a shot because it seemed fun,” Beer said. “Plus my high school coach begged me to join the team.” He started competing in the field events and never looked back. Read More

With Halo-Halloween, FASA celebrates with a Filipino dessert

As recently as the early 2010s, it was standard practice for surgeons to provide 30 to 40 or more opioid pills for common, minimally invasive procedures. Most of these pills, however, would remain untouched, left over in the patient’s medical cabinet or kitchen pantries for potential misuse. A team of researchers led by URMC’s Dr. Jacob Moalem set out to reduce these opioid overprescriptions. Read More