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  2. Espasol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Espasol

    Espasol is a chewy and soft, cylinder-shaped Filipino rice cake. It is made from glutinous rice flour cooked in coconut milk and sweetened coconut strips and, afterwards, dusted or coated with toasted rice flour. [1] [2] Originating from the province of Laguna, it is traditionally sold during the Christmas season.

  3. Tibok-tibok - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tibok-tibok

    Tibok-tibok (Pampangan: tibuktíbuk) or carabao-milk pudding is a Pampangan dessert pudding made primarily from carabao (water buffalo) milk and ground soaked glutinous rice . Originating in the Philippine province of Pampanga , it is especially popular in Cagayan .

  4. Pusô - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pusô

    Pusô or tamu, sometimes known in Philippine English as "hanging rice", is a Filipino rice cake made by boiling rice in a woven pouch of palm leaves. It is most commonly found in octahedral , diamond, or rectangular shapes, but it can also come in various other intricately woven complex forms.

  5. List of rice dishes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_rice_dishes

    A Filipino rice cake made with glutinous rice, coconut milk, and chocolate Mosaranna: India: Curd rice, considered a staple food of brahmins of the Karnataka state of South India. In this dish, curd is added to cooked rice and eaten straight away. Sometimes mustard seeds, red chillies, curry leaves and lentils are fried in oil and added to the ...

  6. Ginataang mais - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ginataang_mais

    Ginataang mais means "corn in coconut milk" in Filipino. Ginataang mais is made by boiling glutinous rice (malagkit) until almost done. Sweet corn, coconut milk (gata), and sugar are then added and the heat lowered shortly before the rice is fully cooked. In some recipes, coconut milk is added after cooking.

  7. This Is the Secret to Cooking the Fluffiest Rice on the Stove

    www.aol.com/secret-cooking-fluffiest-rice-stove...

    The instructions on most rice packaging suggest a 2:1 ratio of liquid to rice, but achieving fluffy rice with separated grains often requires a bit less water. A ratio of 1 ¾ cups of water to 1 ...

  8. Category:Philippine rice dishes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Philippine_rice...

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  9. Lugaw - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lugaw

    According to the National Commission for Culture and the Arts, lugaw is one of the earliest historically-documented dishes in the Philippines. The Vocabulario de la lengua tagala (1613) by Fr. Pedro de San Buenaventura, defines "logao" (Hispanized as "aroz guisado") as "rice mixed with [coconut] milk or water or of both (porridge)."