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Pastil is a Filipino dish made with steamed rice wrapped in banana leaves with dry shredded beef, chicken, or fish. It originates from the Maguindanao people and is a popular, cheap breakfast meal in Mindanao, especially among Muslim Filipinos. [1]
Menudo (from Spanish: "small [bits]"), also known as ginamay or ginagmay (Cebuano: "[chopped into] smaller pieces"), is a traditional stew from the Philippines made with pork and sliced liver in tomato sauce with carrots and potatoes. [1] Unlike the Mexican dish of the same name, it does not use tripe, hominy, or red chili sauce. [2]
Goto typically uses glutinous rice (malagkit), but can also be made with regular rice boiled with an excess of water.It is prepared almost identically to arroz caldo.Rice is cooked with water infused with ginger, then garnished with toasted garlic, scallions, black pepper, and crumbled chicharon.
A common ingredient used in the Philippines and particularly in Northern Ilocano cuisine. It is made by fermenting salted anchovies. Bagoong terong: It is made by salting and fermenting the bonnet mouth fish. This bagoong is coarser than Bagoong monamon, and contains fragments of the salted and fermented fish. Banana ketchup: Luzon
There are three distinct types of wonton noodle dishes found in Philippines. One is mami , which is a noodle soup that has egg noodles, wontons, and various vegetables in a hot broth. The name mami is derived from a Chinese phrase that means “pork noodles". [ 13 ]
In the Philippines, fried wontons are often called pinseques fritos (pinsec frito in the Castilian singular). [17] Pritong pinsek is the Cebuano and Tagalog name. It also figures in the noodle soup pancit Molo, named after the Molo district of Iloilo City. [18] Wonton wrappers in the broth serve as the noodles in the dish.
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The first type of silog to be named as such was the tapsilog.It was originally intended to be quick breakfast or late-night hangover fare. It developed from tapsi, which referred to meals of beef tapa and sinangag with no fried egg explicitly mentioned, and diners which mainly or exclusively served such meals were called tapahan or tapsihan in Filipino. [2]