enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. List of Philippine dishes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Philippine_dishes

    A popular spicy Maranao main dish made of palapa, grated coconut, bell peppers, poultry or fish, turmeric, chilli, and vegetables. Served with a soup made of the same ingredients and served over white rice. Pinakbet: Ilocos Vegetable dish A popular Ilocano dish made of different vegetables like okra, eggplant and bitter gourd cooked in fish sauce.

  3. 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.

  4. 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 .

  5. Binaki - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Binaki

    Binaki (IPA: [ˈbɪ.nɑ.kiʔ]) or pintos is a type of steamed corn sweet tamales from two regions in the Philippines – Bukidnon and Bogo, Cebu. They are distinctively wrapped in corn husks and are commonly sold as pasalubong and street food in Northern Mindanao and Cebu. It is sometimes anglicized as "steamed corn cakes".

  6. Filipino cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Filipino_cuisine

    Filipino cuisine is composed of the cuisines of more than a hundred distinct ethnolinguistic groups found throughout the Philippine archipelago.A majority of mainstream Filipino dishes that comprise Filipino cuisine are from the food traditions of various ethnolinguistic groups and tribes of the archipelago, including the Ilocano, Pangasinan, Kapampangan, Tagalog, Bicolano, Visayan, Chavacano ...

  7. List of Asian cuisines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Asian_cuisines

    Few examples of famous Visayan foods include Cebu's Lechon variant, Iloilo's La Paz batchoy, Bacolod's inasal and piaya, and Leyte's roscas, humba, moron, and bukayo. Mindanao cuisine's dishes are richly flavored with the spices common to Southeast Asia. Some parts of Mindanao are predominantly Muslim, where pork is rarely consumed.

  8. 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 ...

  9. Masi (food) - Wikipedia

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

    Masi is a dish of glutinous rice balls with a peanut and muscovado filling from Cebu, Philippines. It is made from sweetened galapong (ground-soaked glutinous rice) shaped into little balls with a filling of chopped roasted peanuts and muscovado or brown sugar. It is then boiled in water until it floats. It can also be steamed.