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Name Image Region Type Description Adobo: Nationwide Meat/Seafood/Vegetable dish Typically pork or chicken, or a combination of both, is slowly cooked in vinegar, cooking oil, crushed garlic, bay leaf, black peppercorns, and soy sauce, and often browned in the oven or pan-fried afterward to get the desirable crisped edges.
Emilio Aguinaldo’s favorite dish is home cooked pinangat na isda. A top Filipino cuisine, it is steamed fish like tilapia with a fusion of ground chicharrón, patís, burong mangga, labanos or tomato with unsoy sprigs. The steamed fish variations can include Alakaak, Bakoko, Bangus, Bisugo, Bugaong, Hito, Kitang or Sapsap. [10]
Pages in category "Philippine fish dishes" The following 14 pages are in this category, out of 14 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A. Afritadang isda; B.
Pinais is a Filipino style of cooking from the Southern Tagalog region consisting of fish, small shrimp, or other seafood and shredded coconut wrapped in banana and steamed or boiled in plain water or coconut water with sun-dried sour kamias fruits. It is also simply called sinaing (literally "cooked by boiling or steaming").
Pinakbet – usually includes bitter melon, [2] and is an indigenous Filipino dish from the northern regions of the Philippines. Pinakbet is made from mixed vegetables steamed in fish or shrimp sauce. [3] Stuffed melon – Turkish dish made of melon stuffed with meat and rice. [4] [5]
Philippine fish dishes (14 P) Pages in category "Philippine seafood dishes" The following 13 pages are in this category, out of 13 total.
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.
Common dishes bearing the term, however, can vary substantially depending on what is being cooked. Pinangat na isda may sometimes also be referred to as paksiw , though it is a different but related dish that uses sour fruits like calamansi , kamias ( bilimbi ) or sampalok ( tamarind ) to sour the broth rather than vinegar.