Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
It is a very old dish adapted from Chinese fried rice with influences from Spanish cuisine by Chinese Filipino immigrants in the Spanish colonial era of the Philippines. It is sometimes differentiated as "Spanish-style fried rice". It is usually served in Chinese Filipino restaurants in major Spanish-era cities like Manila, Cebu, Zamboanga, and ...
The key components to homemade fried rice are rice, eggs and oil. The rice should be previously cooked, 1 to 3 days before, for lower moisture content.
Bagoong fried rice is a type of Filipino fried rice using bagoong alamang (shrimp paste) as its main flavoring agent. Meat, scallions, as well as green mangoes are optionally additions. Java rice, also called "yellow fried rice", is a Filipino fried rice dish characterized by its yellow-orange color due to the use of turmeric or annatto.
Ikan goreng is a generic term that refers to various kinds of Indonesian and Malaysian dishes of deep fried fish or other forms of seafood. Ikan bakar – Indonesian and Malay grilled fish; Ikan goreng – Indonesian and Malaysian fried fish; Inun-unan – Filipino cooking process
Sinangag (Tagalog pronunciation: [sinɐˈŋag]), also called garlic fried rice or garlic rice, is a Filipino fried rice dish cooked by stir-frying pre-cooked rice with garlic. The rice used is preferably stale, usually leftover cooked rice from the previous day, as it results in rice that is slightly fermented and firmer.
Chosilog – chorizo, fried rice and fried egg. Cornsilog – corned beef, fried rice and fried egg. Chicksilog or noksilog – fried chicken (piniritong manok or pritong manok), fried rice and fried egg. Daingsilog – daing na isda (dried fish), fried rice and fried egg. Bangsilog – dried , marinated bangus , fried rice and fried egg.
Burong isda variants are usually named after the fish they were made with; e.g. burong bangus for burong isda made with bangus . Shrimp versions of the dish are known as burong hipon or balao-balao. Burong isda is very similar to other fermented fish and rice dishes of Asia, including narezushi of Japanese cuisine and pla ra of Thai cuisine.
Balao-balao, also known as burong hipon ("pickled shrimp"), is a Filipino condiment of cooked rice and whole raw shrimp (esp. Alamang) fermented with salt and angkak (red yeast rice). Once stir-fried, it can be eaten as is with rice or used as a dipping sauce for grilled or fried dishes.