Saturday, May 16, 2015

PORK ADOBO



I grew up enjoying this version of Adobo. This Adobo is different from other versions. Not your usual adobo cooked with soy sauce or toyo, but instead, patis was used, hence a paler version of it. Aside from the fish sauce, the other secret to this version is how it is cooked. Usually, we just simmer it until the meat is tender. But the big difference here is that after simmering, we SANGKUTSA it! Sangkutsa as my Mom told me is the process of drying the sauce as you stir-fry slowly on low fire to extract the oil and using it to fry the meat with. All the flavours come out of this process and this adds colour and a fuller and bolder flavour to the dish as you are frying it as it turns golden brown. It is the ideal result we are trying to achieve with ‘sangkutsa’. But some do it the short cut way and forgo it and uses toyo instead to put colour and flavor. In some regions, they call it, ”Sinangkutsang Adobo” for obvious reasons and uses annatto seeds to further add colour.

Like other dishes, it tastes better and better every time it is reheated. The sauce seeps into the meat so it is more flavorful! Sinangag cooked on the same pan it was reheated enhances eating experience. Drizzle your fried rice with the remaining adobo oil, pat it with patis and you’re good to go on a psychedelic adobo-sinangag trip! Be sure to have a good cup of coffee or tea afterwards. This is really a different version of the unofficial beloved national ulam! Good for breakfast, lunch, merienda (with kaning lamig) or dinner. But if on a diet, don’t serve this as you will not be able to control the urge for second, third or fourth servings of rice!

I remember my Tito Tony cooks this for pulutan. Although the dry version. He lets the sauce dry up and just fry it. Adobong Tuyo as it is called. When it comes to Adobo, he is an expert. Rheeza can attest to that as he sampled his version when we were living in Sta. Maria. My Mom taught me how to cook this. The first time I attempted this, I called her over the phone and told me step by step how it is done. She pointed out not to forget to SANGKUTSA. I had several attempts before having it done the way she cooks it.

I once read on an article written by Marie Pascual on the recipe of " Sinangkutsang Adobo, "While adobo is common and actually simple to prepare (no more than 5 ingredients), I boldly claim it's in the technique: not the chef kind but the family secret kind that's passed on from genertion to the next. Never written, just told in passing during stove top conversations." 

And with that, extra rice please!


Sawsawan:

Patis na may sili
Asin



Ingredients:
1 kg Pork Liempo (cut into large cubes)
½ kg Pork Kasim (cut into large cubes)
½ kg Pork Liver (cut into large cubes)
2 cups vinegar
1 cup patis
1 cup water
¼ cup cooking oil
3 bulbs garlic (crushed. You can include the skin for more added flavour)
1 tsp ground black pepper
1 tsp whole black pepper

Procedure:

1.       Combine all ingredients in a cooking pan.

2.       Simmer to boil. Do not stir until the vinegar is cooked. (“Kitchen legends” tells that it will taste bitter if stirred when the vinegar is not yet cooked. At least 3 minutes boiling. “Better safe than bitter!”)
3.       Stir occasionally.
4.       Put in low fire and simmer until the sauce thickens. Remove the thickened sauce and put in a container and save for later.

 




5.       Sangkutsa time. Cook until the oil of the meat appears.



6.       Fry using the oil from the meat. Add cooking oil; continue frying until the meat is golden brown.


7.       When the meat is golden brown, put the sauce back. This will deglaze the sauce, meat and garlic that were caramelized on the pan. All the flavours are concentrated on it and it will be mixed back to the sauce. This makes the Adobo “sinfully delicious”.


8.       Cook until the sauce thickens and become oily. When done, remove from heat and serve with hot steaming rice! (Although it is better with ‘bahaw’ or ‘kaning lamig”.)


9.       Fry some garlic as toppings. Include the skin.
10.    Enjoy!







Monday, February 9, 2015

SINIGANG NA ALIMANGO SA BAYABAS


When I was young, Sunday lunch was always special. We lived in my Grandmother’s house then and Sundays means all are present. My 3 Uncles have no work, my Mom and Dad and my sisters, we are all at home. My Tito Boy usually is the self-appointed cook every Sunday and I am the self-appointed Coke runner (Coca-Cola that is). I usually will grab a rattan basket and buy 2 bottles of Coke Litro at either Ka Linda’s Store or Ka Inggo’s.

A break from the usual “halabos” na alimango was the Sinigang na Alimango sa Bayabas. I always like slurping the sweet tangy soup of this dish and pouring it on a heaping serving of rice. Taking off the shell always creates anticipation as to how much “alige” there is. We always eat with our hands to easily take off the meat from the shell of the crab even if it’s difficult to scoop the rice due to the soup. Of course the meal would not be complete without “patis” to dip your fingers at before taking a handful of wet rice and putting it in your mouth and swallowing it. As always, you finish the meal with a glass of ice-cold Coke.

As I was in the market one Sunday morning, I saw a lady selling it and suddenly, I know what to cook for lunch. Here is my take on the dish with a little help from my Mom as I called her to recall how it is done.

Ingredients:

1 kilo Alimango (Mud Crabs)
½ kilo ripe guava
2 medium size onions
1 liter water for the soup
¼ cup patis
2 teaspoon rock salt
¼ cup sugar





Procedure:

1.       Boil water.
2.       Slice guava and put in water. Boil until cooked.
3.       Remove from water using a strainer. Mash on a bowl and strain the juice back on the soup.
4.       Add patis, rock salt and sugar. Reduce or add quantity according to taste. (It should be sweet-salty-fruity taste).
5.       Put in onions.
6.        Bring to a boil.
7.       Add the Alimango (if the crabs are too big, cut them in half if you like).
8.       Boil until it’s done. ( the crabs are done when they turned orange)
9.       Serve with rice and patis. Ice cold Coke is a must!
10.   Enjoy!






Sunday, February 8, 2015

TINUMIS

T I N U M I S



Tinumis is one of the foods I grew up eating. When I was young, my Tito Boy used to cook it every Saturday. He usually finished cooking it around 10:30 am and I remember getting a cupful of this hot black soup and eating it while watching cartoons.  I’ll be eating a lot with rice during lunch time and adding to the yum factor is the “sawsawang patis na may pinigang siling panigang”.
Now, my Mom cooks it and has become a somewhat a staple food in every occasion lately. Oddly enough, it is served not only during our lunch or dinner time, it is requested whenever there are birthdays, fiesta and get togethers.

As I grew fondly of cooking, I was eager to learn how cook this somewhat ‘heirloom recipe’ if we may call it. With the basic knowledge from my Inang (that’s how we call our Lola Elena) Tito Boy, Ninong Baby and Tito Tony (yes, all in the family knows how to cook and they all have their specialties), this made it easy for me to learn how to cook it from my mother. The secret of it all as she says is the “pangsangkutsa” or pre-cooking of the meat. “Sangkutsahin mo hanggang lumabas ang mantika” was always her reminder for the flavour of the meat to be enhanced.
Tinumis may be similar in appearance with Dinuguan, but as I learned from experience and by family tradition, they are different because of the ingredients mainly the souring agent. Tinumis uses Sampalok while Dinuguan uses Suka or Vinegar. So far, in other places I visited, their Tinumis were almost the same as ours. But some use pork instead of the Cara Beef we usually use.

This is how to cook Tinumis as I learned from my Mother.


INGREDIENTS:



1 kilo Cara Beef (Carabao’s meat. You could use beef or pork)
1 bowl Pig’s blood
Half a head of Garlic
1 Onion
3 Tomatoes
3 bunch Mustasa
1/2 kilo Sampalok
Isang tumpok na Sampalok Leaves (usbong ng Sampalok)
1 Liter water
1/2 cup Patis
4 pieces Siling Panigang
Salt to taste.

PROCEDURE:     

1.       Sautee garlic, Onion and tomatoes. Make sure they are cooked thoroughly. Mash the tomatoes until they are pureed
2.       Put meat. Add ½ cup of patis. ( I never use vetsin, Patis is my vetsin). 
3.       “Sangkutsahin mo hanggang lumabas ang katas ng karne.” Save some of the juice coming from the meat during the "sangkutsa" process.  This will make the soup tasty.
4.       When all the juice from meat has come out and meat oil comes sizzling, fry the meat a little until it turned slightly brown. Then pour the blood, stirring constantly to prevent coagulation. Cook blood thoroughly. Blood is cooked when it turned chocolaty brown.
5.       As the water boils, sing “sampalok ay… inyong nilalaga, pinipiga, sinasala.” If you have a bad voice, buy the instant sampalok instead. But I suggest, you do a little voice lesson because natural sampalok is way better than the instant. The difference in taste is miles away. (Sing that also). Seriously, use the REAL SAMPALOK! Just don’t sing na lang.
6.       Add water and bring to a boil until the meat is tender. Put the saved meat juice. 
7.       Put salt and additional patis according to your liking.
8.       Cut the mustasa leaves an inch. It is somewhat bitter and to get rid of its bitter taste, put it in a container, pour hot water and salt over. Crush it by hand gently and wash with cold water.
9.       Put in the boiling soup and then lower the fire. Put the usbong ng Sampalok after being finely cut.
10.    After 5 minutes turn the fire off.
11.   Then it is ready. Enjoy!

Sampalok

Siling Panigang

USbong ng Sampalok

Garlic, the more the better.

Tomatoes and Mustasa Leaves


The whole cast


Enjoy with hot steaming rice and patis with chilies.