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Friday, October 14, 2016

Guts, Frogs, Bugs and Everything Wild: Top 10 Exotic Food in the Philippines

Balut by Meng via Flickr
GutsFrogs, Bugs, Urchins and Snails, who would ever thought that you could even eat them right? Well, for thrill seeking and wonder driven people, anything can be turned into a foodgasmic wonder (not that everyone is fan of exotic food).

Balut by Meng via Flickr
Balut by Meng via Flickr
Exotic food are found all over the world, like the Soup no. 5, which is basically a soup made from cow, or bull testicles, Fugu, for its delicate taste and the risk of dying from tetrodotoxins (if it’s not prepared correctly!) and live Gae-bool for its superbly weird alien like appearance (Spoonworm).
But did you know that there are some equally strange foods here in the PH? Listed below are the top 10 exotic dishes in the country. Eating these sort of dishes isn’t really for the faint hearted (especially if you’re not accustomed to these things), but for strange food fanatics, these would surely make it to their must-taste-this-before-I-die list.

1. Isaw, Betamax, GizzardIsaw by anna_d via FlickrIsaw by anna_d via Flickr

Isaw by anna_d via Flickr
This might just be the mildest among the rest of the items on this list. All of these three are grilled, and there are basically sold everywhere in the country, most especially in places near university belts. Isaw is chicken intestines, betamax is grilled blood cubes, and gizzard is basically grilled chicken gizzard. Other culture also eat innards, in fact there’s a couple of words pertaining to innards such as Giblet, for chicken neck, heart and liver, Numbles for animal entrails.

2. Balut

Balut (photo courtesy of Kinobe)
Balut (photo courtesy of Kinobe)
Evenings would never be complete without hearing some vendor calling out “baloooooooot!”. Some vendors walk, others would be in their bicycles. But did you ever try to buy one? If you haven’t and you’re wondering what it is, then it’s a duck egg. To be more specific, it’s a developed duck egg, which of course means that there’s a little baby duck inside it. It’s very popular among the locals. It has this bit of broth that has a distinct taste, and some egg yolk and hardened albumen. Some would put vinegar in it, others would just put a bit of salt.

3. Betute Tugak (Deep fried stuffed frogs) Pampanga

Betute Tugak by Rom via Flickr
Betute Tugak by Rom via Flickr
Betute Tugak by Rom via Flickr
Fancy deep fried frogs with meat stuffings? They always say that frogs taste like chicken and they do. That in itself is comforting, just close your eyes and imagine you’re eating chicken if you’re having second thoughts on eating this. Betute Tugak is quite popular in Pampanga. These frogs are those that roam around farms during the rainy season. They’d remove the skin, season it with salt and pepper and stuff it with sautéed ground pork.

4. Kinilaw na Tamilok in Palawan and Aklan (Shipworm or Woodworm dipped in Salt and Vinegar)

Tamilok by Erwin Oliva via Flickr
Tamilok by Erwin Oliva via Flickr
Tamilok by Erwin Oliva via Flickr
Kinilaw is a popular way of preparing seafood especially shelled mollusks. Kinilaw is quite similar to ceviche, where you would need some acidic solution to “cook” the ingredients. They basically soak it in either vinegar or calamansi juice with bits of ginger, and minced garlic and they leave it for a bit. This is then served as is. Tamilok is a bivalve mollusk that is attached in mangroves. They look like worms inside, but they taste like the typical oyster. So imagine your typical oyster served in kinilaw style and you would get an idea of how this would taste like.

5. Abuos (Ant Eggs) Ilocos

Abuos Adobo by louis r via Flickr
Abuos Adobo by louis r via Flickr
Abuos Adobo by louis r via Flickr
Let’s now look at the bug choices in this menu. These creepy crawlers might put you off a bit, but you might be surprised how other culture also eat red ant eggs, like in Thailand and Mexico. In Thailand they cook it with lemon grass, garlic and chillies. In Mexico they call it as escamole and they serve it pan fried in butter and spices. Ilocos serves it sautéed with garlic and tomatoes.

6. Adobong Kamaru (Mole Cricket), Pampanga

Adobong Kamaru
Adobong Kamaru by gen-edstudents.blogspot.com
Rice fields would often have Kamaru. These can be a little bit of a pest, so to counter them, farmers harvest these insects and people found ways on how to eat them. Served mostly in adobo style (which would mean to cook it in sautéed garlic, soy sauce and vinegar) this peculiar dish is more oftenly eaten together with beer. These are crunchy on the outside and gooey on the inside and they’re quite commonly sold in Pampanga.

7. Adobong Uok (Beetle Larvae) Rizal

Uok or Coconut Worm

Uok or Coconut Worm by conquistadorc

If you’re an avid fan of Andrew Zimmerman’s show, Bizarre Food with Andrew Zimmerman, you might have already came across with Adobong Uok. They live in dead coconut logs. Natives would collect them and eat them raw or cooked adobo style. It has an interesting texture and taste that people from around the globe are a fan off.

8. Adobong Salagubang (June Bugs) Nueva Ecija


If you have tried Adobong Kamaru, you should also indulge in Adobong Salagubang. They have the same texture, crunchy on the outside and mushy and juicy on the inside. They are common around the rainy season in the markets of Nueva Ecija, so if you’re out to have a bite of this crispy delicacy, then you might consider dropping by Ecija when the rain starts falling.

9. Adobong Sawa (Python)

Sawa can be found anywhere, especially in places with vast farmlands. They are also quitecommon in exotic restaurants. Sawa meat tastes more like chicken and they are either fried or cooked in adobo style. Their skin is also deep fried and served in Cabanatuan Nueva Ecija. Compared to the adobong bugs mentioned earlier, this dish would certainly not be so off putting especially for newbies in the field of eating exotic food.

10. Salawaki (Fresh Sea Urchin) Bohol

Fresh Sea Urchins
Fresh Sea Urchins
Fresh Sea Urchins by Caspar Diederik via Flickr
Who wouldn’t know about Sea Urchins? They’re very popular aphrodisiacs and they’recommon around places near the sea especially in Bohol, Bolinao, and La Union. These are spiny sea creatures with yellow or orange insides. Their texture is similar to that of oysters and they are best eaten raw and fresh.

The Philippines does have a lot of things to offer apart from Instagram worthy shots, to worth mentioning in blog experiences. Eating these exotic food would just amp up the ultimate vacation experience, the question now is, Do you have the stomach to try these dishes?

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TOP 10 Tropical and Exotic Fruits of the Philippines


    top10philippines.blogspot.com

  1. Philippine Mangoes
  2. - undeniably Philippine mangoes are the sweetest and juiciest in the world. Recorded in the 1995 World Guinness Book of Records as the sweetest fruit. The sweetest mangoes come from the province of Zambales and Guimaras in IloIlo.

    There is a wide variety of mangoes in the Philippines but the most popular and the sweetest is the "Kalabaw" variety. Locals eat unripe green mangoes with bagoong (shrimp paste) although this maybe an usually acquired taste. Green mangoes are great with vodka as cocktails!


    top10philippines.blogspot.com
  3. Rambutan - sweet and juicy when fresh. Rambutan literally means hairy caused by the 'hair' that covers this fruit.



    top10philippines.blogspot.com
  4. Avocado - very refreshing as fruit shake. Try if you can find avocado flavored ice-cream in the local groceries. Arce is a good brand of local ice cream. They use local fruits as flavor.Avocado is cheap in the Philippines. You can buy them at 1$USD for a kilo and when in season they can go as low as .50$USD per kilo!



    top10philippines.blogspot.com
  5. Lanzones - sweet and succulent little round fruits. The sweetest lanzones come from the province of Camiguin, where they hold an annual festival celebrating the lanzones fruit.


  6. Photobucket
  7. Durian - the king of Tropical fruits found it's way in the Philippines through our neighboring countries. Known for its large size and unique aroma. Some people regard the durian as fragrant; others find the aroma overpowering and offensive. The 19th-century British naturalist Alfred Russel Wallace famously described its flesh as "a rich custard highly flavoured with almonds"The province of Davao in Mindanao is home to durian farms.


    top10philippines.blogspot.com
  8. Langka (Jackfruit) - when ripe this fruit is very sweet and has a very aromatic flavor. It also widely used as cooking ingredient for local desserts such as ginataan and turon.


    top10philippines.blogspot.com
  9. Atis (Sugar Apple) - very sweet and creamy. It's a little bit of effort to eat this fruit as they have a lot of seeds. The fruit flesh is sweet, white to light yellow, and resembles and tastes like custard. The edible portion coats the seeds generously; a bit like the gooey portion of a tomato seed. Sugar-apple has a very distinct, sweet-smelling fragrance


    Photobucket
  10. Chico (Sapodilla) - It's aroma can be compared to beer but don't let it fool you for it is tasty. The flavor is exceptionally sweet with what can be described as a malty flavor.Originally known to have come from the West Indies


    top10philippines.blogspot.com
  11. Watermelon (Pakwan) - though widely available in many parts of the world nothing beats the refreshing taste of a succulent, sweet and juicy watermelon in the summer months.


    mangoes
  12. Santol (Wild Mangosteen) - available during the summer season. The taste is sweet and sour. The bigger variety called "Bangkok" is sweeter, the smaller variety is on the sour end. It is also used as souring agent for some Filipino dishes like sinigang.


MORE EXOTIC FRUITS FROM THE PHILIPPINES....

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Kaimito (Star Apple)


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Duhat (Java Plum)


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Guyabano (Soursop)


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Balimbing (Star Fruit)


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Chesa (Lucuma) It has the texture of squash or the yolk of a boiled egg.


Photobucket
Aratiles (Jamaica Cherry, Muntingia) These cherries are very sweet. The sweetness brings with it an excellent taste, because it has a lovely fragrance that makes people keep on eating them. These cherries are often eaten by children because they taste quite like cotton candy.


Photobucket
Sinigwelas (Spanish Plum) It does taste like plum but it has less flesh and more seed.

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6 interesting facts you didn’t know about Filipino food

bread
Filipinos love to eat. Filipinos also love taking photos of what they eat. Nowadays, we spare a couple of minutes capturing the perfect shot of our meal before we dig into our plates.
Photographer Neal Oshima’s exhibit “Pagkaing Filipino” puts food porn to a higher level. More than just a feast for the eyes, his photographs pay attention to how food is cooked, the history behind local ingredients, the cooking traditions that Filipinos still practice, among others.
Here are some things we learned from his mouthwatering exhibit.

1| We are a rice-eating nation but we do love our bread.



Filipinos enjoy a wide variety of breads, the most famous of which is the breakfast staple pan de sal.  Pan de sal literally translates to “bread of salt.” A traditional panaderia makes use of a pugonor wood-burning oven to bake bread and biscuits such as rosquillos, biscocho, broas, galletas, and bañadas. We also have bread with interesting names, such as kababayan, pan Amerikano, and pan de regla.

2| Making lechon is a meticulous process.


lechon

Most of the time, the lechon served in fiestas disappears within an hour of serving, but cooking it isn’t a piece of cake (because it’s pork…get it?). First, the slaughtered pig is hanged to make sure all the blood has been removed. Air-drying also ensures crunchier skin, and we all know that is the best part of lechon. Next, the pig is roasted in an open fire for four hours or so. The roasted pig is left to cool for a couple of minutes, to keep the meat moist and the skin crackling. To keep flies and wayward hands from touching the lechon while it cools, it’s recommended to shroud it in a kulambo like a sleeping infant.

3| Fancy dinner parties used to be thrown in a comedor.


comedor

The dinner party scene in Noli Me Tangere, in which a nail-biting power struggle involving chicken tinola took place, was held in Capitan Tiago’s comedor. During the Spanish era, rich families had spacious dining areas with long hardwood tables that could seat up to 20 guests. Heirloom tableware and fine bone china were laid out on the la mesa during extravagant dinner parties.


4| A chef created an entire menu inspired by Jose Rizal.


rizal

Chef Rob Pengson of The Goose Station created dishes inspired by the life and writings of Jose Rizal. Each item in the menu, such as kesong puti, foie gras taho, and dinuguan black pudding, is accompanied by a Rizalian quote. Take tres leches, a sponge cake  served with sampaguita, coconut, and a burst of red raspberry: it’s the edible interpretation of the line “I die without seeing the dawn brighten over my native land” from Mi Ultimo Adios.

5| The sweetest mangoes are in Western Luzon.


mangoes

Mango is the national fruit of the Philippines—unofficially. While this has yet to be authorized by the National Historical Comission, there is no denying that Philippine mangoes are among the best of their kind. The sweetest variety can be found in Pangasinan, Zambales, and the Ilocos region. But of course, Guimaras island in Western Visayas has world-famous mangoes, too.

6| If you’re raring to sample the best Vietnamese cuisine in the country, go to Palawan.

viet

In Barangay Sta. Lourdes, Puerto Princesa, Palawan, fans of Vietnamese pho can get their fill of chao long in Viet Ville, the 70’s resettlement camp of Vietnam War refugees in the Philippines. Chao long is a dish of flat rice noodles cooked in a savory pork or beef broth, topped with sprigs of fresh mint, basil, and raw bean sprouts. Banh mi, a French-inspired roast pork-cheese-and-baguette sandwich, is also available in Vietnamese eateries in Palawan.



“Pagkaing Filipino: Images of Regional Cuisine” by Neal Oshima runs until August 3, 2014 at the National Museum of the Philippines.

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Popular Filipino Dishes

Chicken Adobo - Filipino Food
To help familiarize our website’s visitors with Filipino food in an easy way, we’ve drawn up a simple list of a few Philippine dishes and foodstuff commonly eaten in the Philippines. We’re still working on adding more pronunciation audio and photos. Do remember to check back soon! 

 Adobo: pork or chicken marinated in soy sauce and vinegar

BALUT: Filipino duck egg

 balutduck egg with a developed embryo




Bagoong
Bagoong


 Bagoong: fermented paste made from small fish or tiny shrimps

Pancit Bihon

 Pansit: Chinese-influenced noodles




Sinigang na Hipon
Sinigang na Hipon


 Sinigang: sour stew, with the souring ingredient usually being tamarind




Bicol Express (Bicolano dish)
Bicol Express (iconic dish of the Bicolano people)

Bicol Express: pieces of pork stewed in gata (coconut milk) with sili



lumpia
Filipino Lumpia with sawsawan

Lumpia: spring roll / eggrolls



Longganisa: Filipino sausages
Longganisa: Filipino sausages

Longganisa: sausages
Tapsilog with sliced cucumbers
Tapsilog: combination of tapa (dried meat), sinangag (fried rice) and itlog (egg); a popular Filipino breakfast



tinortang talong
Tortang Talong (Eggplant “Omelet”)

Torta: omelet

Tinola: Filipino Food
Tinola: chicken stew with papaya

Afritada: meat stew with green peppers, onions, tomatoes, and potatoes
Kare-kare: ox tail stew with banana blossoms cooked in a peanut sauce
Escabeche: sweet and sour fish dish
Menudo: ox tail stew with chickpeas
Pinakbet: vegetable dish cooked with bagoong
Arroz Caldo: rice porridge with chicken
Kaldereta: goat stew
Kilawin: raw fish
Daing: dried fish
Dinengdeng: boiled vegetables with bagoong
Dinuguan: blood pudding with internal organs
Embutido: porkloaf sausage
Estofado: beef stew with beans, carrots and tomatoes
Ginataan: cooked with gata (coconut milk)
Inihaw: barbecued
Laing: taro leaves cooked in gata
Mechado: beef and onions cooked with tomato sauce
Paksiw: stew of fish marinated in vinegar
Pochero: chicken and pork stew with bananas and vegetables
Relyenong bangus: stuffed milkfish
Sinaing: boiled / steamed rice
Sinangag: fried rice
Tapa: seasoned dried meat
Tinapa: smoked fish
Tokwa: tofu
Ukoy: fried shrimp cakes

Read more: http://tagaloglang.com/filipino-dishes/
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