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  2. Puto (food) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Puto_(food)

    Puto is a Filipino steamed rice cake, traditionally made from slightly fermented rice dough . It is eaten as is or as an accompaniment to a number of savoury dishes (most notably, dinuguan). Puto is also an umbrella term for various kinds of indigenous steamed cakes

  3. Puto - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Puto

    Puto may refer to: Puto, a Spanish profanity; Puto (food), a Filipino food; Puto (bug), a genus of scale insects; Puto, a 1987 Filipino teen fantasy comedy "Puto" (song), a 1997 song by Mexican band Molotov; Puto, a 2021 Filipino comedy series

  4. Puto seco - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Puto_seco

    Puto seco, also known as puto masa, are Filipino cookies made from ground glutinous rice, cornstarch, sugar, salt, butter, and eggs. They are characteristically white and often shaped into thick disks.

  5. Puto bumbong - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Puto_bumbong

    Puto bumbong is a Filipino purple rice cake steamed in bamboo tubes. It is traditionally sold during the Christmas season . It is a type of puto (steamed rice cake).

  6. Kutsinta - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kutsinta

    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.

  7. Mexico's punishment for 'puto' chant: More World Cup ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/mexico-puto-chant-world-cup...

    FIFA has sanctioned Mexico's soccer federation for its fans' 'p***' chant yet again.

  8. Dinuguan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dinuguan

    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").

  9. Spanish profanity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spanish_profanity

    Manflor (combination of the English loanword "man" and the word flor meaning "flower") and its variant manflora (a play on manflor using the word flora) are used in Mexico and in the US to refer, usually pejoratively, to a lesbian. (In Eastern Guatemala, the variation mamplor is used.) It is used in very much the same way as the English word ...