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  2. Filipino-American cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Filipino-American_cuisine

    Filipino food has gone through its evolution of adapting other cultures' food practices into their own, or borrowing the food concept into their own. [ 2 ] Filipinos took their food and debut it as they came to America by presenting it in catering and opening up the Philippines' most popular food chain, Jollibee. [ 1 ]

  3. Balbacua - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Balbacua

    The name balbacua is derived from the Latin American dish barbacoa (which is also the source of the English word "barbecue"), though they are very different dishes. While balbacua is a beef stew, barbacoa is instead meat roasted in a pit. The dish was probably named by the Spanish due to the similarity in the length of time in cooking and the ...

  4. Linarang - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linarang

    The name linarang or nilarang (lit. "done as larang"), is the affixed form of the Cebuano verb larang, meaning "to stew with coconut milk and spices". [2] The word is originally a synonym of the ginataan cooking process (ginat-an or tinunoan in Cebuano), but has come to refer exclusively to this particular dish.

  5. Tuslob buwa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tuslob_buwa

    The modern recipe became popular around the 1970s and consists of pork brain (otok) sauteed in oil with onion, garlic, and soy sauce. [1] Around 2014, the dish became more widely available with variants beginning to be served in nearby cities of Lapu-Lapu and Mandaue .

  6. Masi (food) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Masi_(food)

    Masi or Maci or Macy (Hokkien Chinese: 麻糍; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: môa-chî; Mandarin Chinese: 麻糍; pinyin: mácí) is a dish of glutinous rice balls with a peanut and muscovado filling from Cebu, Philippines.

  7. Fast and Delicious: The Most Popular Takeout Cuisines in America

    www.aol.com/fast-delicious-most-popular-takeout...

    8. Vietnamese. Averaging 805,956 searches per month, Vietnamese food is gaining recognition for its use of fresh and healthy ingredients. Dishes like pho, banh mi, and spring rolls are celebrated ...

  8. Sinigang - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sinigang

    Sinigang means "stewed [dish]"; it is nominalized in the form of the Tagalog verb sigang, "to stew". [1] While present nationwide, sinigang is seen to be culturally Tagalog in origin, thus the similar sour stews and soups found in the Visayas and Mindanao (like linarang) and in the Province of Pampanga their version of a sour soup is Called "BulangLang".

  9. Otap (food) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Otap_(food)

    Otap (sometimes spelled utap) is an oval-shaped [1] puff pastry cookie from the Philippines, especially common in Cebu where it originated. [2] It usually consists of a combination of flour, shortening, coconut, and sugar. It is similar to the French palmier cookies, but otap are oval-shaped and more tightly layered and thinner, making it ...