Balut, Lechon and Adobo - Local food in the Phlippines

Filipino food is not the most well-known cuisine internationally. Often dubbed bland and unexciting, that doesn’t bother the Filipinos. Food is an important part of Filipino culture and it’s eaten in abundance and with gusto. Filipino food is, especially compared to its spicy neighbours, relatively mild and often sweeter than what you may be used to.

Specialities

  • Adobo - the unofficial national dish. Consists of meat in stewed soy sauce, vinegar, black pepper and crushed garlic.
  • Adobong pusit: a fragrant dish of squid prepared with soy, vinegar, garlic, onions and tomatoes.
  • Lechon: spit roasted suckling pig covered in a thick pork liver sauce.
  • Siopao: a steamed ball of dough stuffed with different type of fillings made of meat, fish and egg.
  • Batchoy: a traditional noodle soup with a mix of chicken, beef and pork (crackling, meat and offal).
  • Kinilaw: a ceviche style dish consisting of raw fish marinated in coconut vinegar, garlic, ginger and chili peppers.
  • Rice is eaten with almost every meal, from breakfast to late night meryenda (snack).

Remarkable dishes

  • Balut: not for the faint hearted, Balut is a fertilised, developing bird egg (usually duck), boiled and eaten straight from its shell.
  • Durian: the King of Fruits is one of those foodstuffs you either love or hate. It is a large (weighing up to three kilograms) fruit with a spiky rind and is known for its pungent smell and confusing flavour combining sweet and savoury with a fleshy, custardy texture. Can be eaten at various stages of ripeness and is also used to flavour sweet and savoury dishes.
  • Ampalaya: also known as the bitter melon, the ampalaya is a cucumber shaped, wrinkly fruit with a fresh yet bitter flavour.
  • Isaw: a street food made up of chicken or pork intestines, skewered and barbecued.
  • Dinuguan: A thick, black stew made of pig’s blood and chicken or pork intestines.

Drinks

  • It is not recommended to drink tapped water so rather buy filtered water. It is cheaper to buy a big can or bottle of water and fill it at a refilling station, found widely on the streets.
  • Buko Juice is young coconut juice, often served in the shell or with pieces of young coconut floating in the drink.
  • Apart from the southern Muslim parts of the country, alcohol is widely consumed. Beer, San Miguel more specifically, is the alcoholic drink of choice.
  • As imported wine is usually very expensive, stick to the locally made Tuba, a palm wine extracted from coconut flowers (Tuba), Basi, a port like sweet wine made from sugar cane juice or Lambanog, distilled Tuba.
  • Whiskey, rum, brandy and gin are brewed locally and perfectly palatable.

See 'Worldsupporter resources' for Filipino recipes (in Dutch)

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Supporting content
Filippijns recept: Chicken Adobo
Adobong Manok Sa Gata (adobo kip in heerlijke kokossaus)
More contributions of WorldSupporter author: LauraD
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