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  2. Lumpiang Shanghai - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lumpiang_Shanghai

    Lumpiang Shanghai with pancit Canton, another Filipino dish with a misleading Chinese name. Lumpiang Shanghai is regarded as the most basic type of lumpia in Filipino cuisine. Lumpiang Shanghai can be defined by its use of giniling (ground pork) as the main stuffing.

  3. Lumpia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lumpia

    Lumpiang prito ("fried spring roll"), is the generic name for a subclass of lumpia that is fried. It usually refers to lumpiang gulay or lumpiang togue. They can come in sizes as small as lumpiang shanghai or as big as lumpiang sariwà. It is usually eaten with vinegar and chili peppers, or a mixture of soy sauce and calamansi juice known as ...

  4. Filipino Chinese cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Filipino_Chinese_cuisine

    With lumpia, the Chinese eggroll which now has been incorporated into Philippine cuisine, even when it was still called lumpiang Shanghai (indicating frying and a pork filling). Serving meat and/or vegetable in an edible wrapper is a Chinese technique now found in all of Southeast Asia in variations peculiar to each culture.

  5. List of Philippine dishes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Philippine_dishes

    Popular versions include lumpiang shanghai, a fairly narrow fried roll usually with a meat filling, often accompanied by a sweet chili dipping sauce, and lumpiang ubod, a wider, fresh spring roll filled with raw vegetables local to the area. Mechado: Meat dish

  6. Lumpiang gulay - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lumpiang_gulay

    It is sometimes also known as lumpiang prito, a generic name for any fried lumpia versions. [6] Lumpiang gulay is distinguished from other types of lumpia (especially lumpiang Shanghai) in that it has a greater ratio of vegetables to meat. It is also typically thicker in diameter than lumpiang Shanghai because it has more fillings.

  7. Popiah - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Popiah

    In the Chaoshan dialect and Hokkien language, popiah is pronounced as /poʔ˩piã˥˧/ (薄餅), [3] which means "thin flatbread/cake". Depending on the regions in Fujian, it is also commonly referred to as /lun˩piã˥˧/ (潤餅), which is the etymological origin of "lumpia" in the Philippines and Indonesia.

  8. VF Corporation Names Shanghai as New APAC Headquarters - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/vf-corporation-names...

    SHANGHAI–VF Corporation, the outdoor gear maker that owns The North Face, Vans, Supreme, and Dickies among others, is shifting its Asia Pacific headquarters away from Hong Kong in favor of ...

  9. Mama Sita's Holding Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mama_Sita's_Holding_Company

    Stir-fried Okra with Mama Sita's Oyster Sauce Mama Sita's products Stir-friedEggplant with Mama Sita's Oyster Sauce. Mama Sita's Holding Company, Inc. (founded as Marigold Commodities Corporation) is a Philippine based manufacturer of condiments, selling its products under the brand, Mama Sita's.