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Puto cuchinta or kutsinta is a type of steamed rice cake found throughout the Philippines. It is made from a mixture of tapioca or rice flour , brown sugar and lye , enhanced with yellow food coloring or annatto extract , and steamed in small ramekins.
Puto-Pao – a combination of siopao (meat-filled bun) and puto. It uses the traditional puto recipe but incorporates a spiced meat filling. It is similar to some traditional variants of puto (especially in Bulacan) that also have meat fillings. Putong pula - a Tagalog puto from the Rizal Province which uses brown muscovado sugar, giving it a ...
Dinuguan served with puto (Filipino rice cake). Can also be eaten with tuyo (fried dried fish). The most popular term, dinuguan, and other regional naming variants come from their respective words for "blood" (e.g., "dugo" in Tagalog means "blood," hence "dinuguan" as "to be stewed with blood" or "bloody soup").
Puto bumbong is made from a unique heirloom variety of glutinous rice called pirurutong (also called tapol in Visayan), which is deep purple to almost black in color. [2] Pirurutong is mixed with a larger ratio of white glutinous rice ( malagkit or malagkit sungsong in Tagalog, lit.
[1] [4] In the Visayas regions, mamón is known as torta mamón, torta Visaya (or torta Bisaya), or simply torta. Although the name is derived from Spanish torta, "cake", in some Philippine regions torta could also mean "omelette". The Visayan versions are traditionally denser and greasier in texture.
Puto maya is characteristically al dente, compared to the mushier texture of biko. [10] Biko can also be prepared with other common Filipino ingredients. Examples include ube-biko which is made with ube (mashed purple yam), and pandan biko which is made with pandan leaf extracts; these are characteristically deep purple and bright green ...
Pancit Bam-I – also known as Pancit Bisaya. A specialty originating in Cebu, with bihon (rice) and canton (wheat) noodles sautéed together. Pancit batchoy – Iloilo's stir-fried version of batchoy. Pancit Bato – is local to the Bicol Region; especially the town of Bato in Camarines Sur. The noodles are slightly toasted while it's still dry.
"Sinabawang gulay" simply means "vegetable soup".The dish is found throughout the Philippines and is known under a wide variety of names. It is known as bulanglang na gulay in Batangas; sabaw na utan, law-oy, utan bisaya, or utan kamunggay in the Visayas Islands and Mindanao; and laswa in Western Visayas.