Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Odong, also called pancit odong, is a Visayan noodle soup made with odong noodles, canned smoked sardines in tomato sauce, bottle gourd (upo), loofah (patola), chayote, ginger, garlic, red onions, and various other vegetables.
Pancit odong or Odong – Japanese-Visayan noodle dish from Mindanao and the Visayas that uses yellow round flour noodles called odong, canned sardines in tomato sauce, and vegetables (usually bottle gourd or patola). [9] Pancit Olongapo – pancit miki prepared with sarsa (sauce) made of thickened chicken and pork broth, darkened with a little ...
It features a broth of pork innards like liver and pancreas (lapay) as well as tampalen/tampalin fat - a flavorful pork fat from the stomach area; spiced with garlic, onions, ginger, finger chillies, chilli leaves, and pork blood. Patola (culinary luffa) is the vegetable normally used. The dish also uses misua noodles.
For example, a Latinate word might enter English by way of Old French, but enter Spanish directly from Latin. Such differences can introduce changes in spelling and meaning. Although most of the cognates have at least one meaning shared by English and Spanish, they can have other meanings that are not shared.
Pork cooked in a sweet sauce with pineapple juice and sugar. Tomato sauce is also sometimes added. It is named after the Spanish glazed ham (jamón and endulzado mean "ham" and "glazed" in Spanish, respectively). It is also the name of a type of sweet Philippine sausage noted for its ham-like taste. Humba
Escabeche of tilapia, from the Philippines. Escabeche is the name for several dishes in Spanish, French, Portuguese, Italian, Filipino and Latin American cuisines, consisting of marinated fish, meat or vegetables, cooked or pickled in an acidic sauce (usually with vinegar), and flavored with paprika, citrus, and other spices.
Lomi is best eaten while steaming hot. It is a challenge to finish eating before the bowl gets cold. To spice up the taste, depending on one's preference, a mixture of soy sauce, fish sauce, kalamansi juice and crushed fresh red chili peppers can be added to the dish as a condiment.
The technique consists of inserting the sardines through its back and taking care that they are all placed equally on the rod, above or below it. The concave part of the shank is turned upwards and the tip is inserted into the back of the sardine at the level of the dorsal fin, skirting the spine without breaking it and exiting through the belly.