Showing posts with label pork. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pork. Show all posts

September 4, 2016

etag

Etag from Sagada, prepared by the Igorots of Sagada, Mountain Province.

etag /é-tag/ Ilocano and Cordilleran [Ifugao, Igorot, Kankanaey] preserved meat [n.] cured and aged slab of pork; An indigenous smoked or sun-dried salted slab of pork.


Other local common names:
    • also spelled as itag in IIocano
    • a.k.a. innasin in Ilocano


Etag is the general term used in Cordillera about the native’s traditional way of preserving pork. A slab of a big slice of pork is cured in salt for about a week (or longer) then air-dried under the sun or smoked for several weeks (even months), or both. Though any kind of wood will do the smoking, the Igorots would prefer to use the wood from a tree they called alnos as it would emit pleasant smoke and add an aromatic smoky flavor to the meat. If alnos is not available, wood and leaves of guava trees are said to be a good substitute.

For the locals, the longer the etag is cured in salt and air-dried, the more it is tasty, flavorful, and expensive when sold in the market. The meat would turn darker and darker in color over a long time during the aging process.

Etag may not be appealing to the uninitiated because it has a foul odor and most often has maggots after several days of air-drying the meat, probably because of its exposure to flies.  As it undergoes the aging process, etag is often covered on the surface with a thin layer of milky-white molds similar to when aging cheese. The molds are rinsed off and etag is safe and ready to cook.




This etag from Sagada is partly covered in the middle with white molds over few weeks of aging. This one was prepared by the Igorots of Mountain Province.

The cured meat is grilled and served with cooked rice. It is also used as a meat ingredient in some native vegetable dishes, or boiled in a soupy broth with pinikpikan (chicken that was beaten slowly to death). 

When necessary, etag has to be soaked for a while in plain water and then rinsed thoroughly to reduce its saltiness. 

Etag has to be consumed after a week of drying or smoking. When there is extra etag, it must be stored in a closed container to avoid the infestation of flies and their maggots, ants, cockroaches, and other insects and even from rodents. If stored longer, it has to be sun-dried or smoked again from time to time and avoiding it getting wet or moistened with too much moisture. Hanging the etag right above the smoking kitchen stove when they cook their meal is also a common practice done by the natives when storing and continuing the aging process.

In Mountain Province, the natives and the local government mounted their annual celebration of the Etag Festival for their favorite preserved meat. It is held every February.

Depending on how the aging process was done, etag is generally classified as "smoked" or "sun-dried," as follows:

smoked etag (es-mok e-tag; Cordilleran preserved meat) [n.] a kind of etag that is smoked to further preserve the cured meat. Thus, it is referred to as the "smoked ham" of Cordillera. Smoking is usually done by hanging the etag over and close to the stove or hearth, exposing the cured meat to smoke while being air-dried. The fast way to smoke etag is to build fire on a pile of firewood and place the skewered etag close to the fire but not too close that it would get roasted instead of being just smoked. It is done at least 30 minutes every day for a week and the meat must be kept in a sealed container after each smoking session to avoid the infestation of flies and their maggots. Smoked etag has a dark reddish-brown color because of the stain caused by the smoke.

sun-dried etag (san-drayd e-tag; Cordilleran preserved meat) [n.] a kind of etag that is sun-dried to further preserved the cured meat. It is air-dried under the heat of the sun by skewering the cured meat in a long stick and hang on a stretched rope or clothesline, or simply spread on flat dry surface, such as on concrete structure, big rocks, or on trellis-like frame of bamboo sticks, like those used in drying fish. It is then turned over from hour after hour to equally dry the other side. Sun-dried etag is lighter in color compared to smoked etag due to lack of staining. It would more likely that flies and their maggots would infest the meat if it is not protected with screen or net while in the process of sun drying.

These etags are air-dried under the sun somewhere in the public market of Bontoc, Mountain Province and was described as the  "Bontoc ham" by Phil. Daily Inquirer on its Dec. 21, 2009 issue, as the processed meat is often regarded as the region's version of Christmas ham. (Photo credit to Espiritu of the Phil. Daily Inquirer (Northern Luzon).)

The etag may also be prepared using both curing processes.  That is, the meat is cured first by smoking and then sun-dried in the next few weeks or months that follow.

Nowadays, the Cordillerans (Igorot, Ifugao, Kankanay, and other ethnic tribes of Benguet and Mountain Province) would commonly use pork from cultured or farmed pigs to make etag.  In the past, when the forest of Central Luzon was abounding with wild animals, the natives would hunt wild pigs and wild deer and use the pork of wild pigs and venison of wild deer in making etag. The most coveted and highly valued etag is venison. 


Personal notes: 

With due respect to the customs and traditions of all the ethnic groups of Cordillera and northern Luzon, the process of making etag and how long the aging process would take to complete reminds me of the Fire Mummies (a.k.a. Kabayan Mummies) of Benguet. The mummification process of fire mummies was unique compared to on how mummification was done in Egypt and the rest of the world. It was like the natives were preserving their dead in a process similar to when making an etag. The mummification would begin right after a person died, whom they would let ingest a very salty drink. The corpse was washed and set over a fire in a seated position to dry out bodily fluids. The dead were also subjected to the smoking process. Tobacco smoke was blown into the mouth to dry further the inside of the body including the internal organs and then herbs were rubbed into the body before the mummified body was placed in a coffin of dugout pinewood and laid to rest in rock shelters, caves, or burial niches. 

This mummification process of Cordillera ended in the 16th century when Spain started its colonization of the country, but the practice of making etag persisted for centuries, even to these days. The people of Mountain Province conserved this ancient traditional meat delicacy and promoted it by mounting an annual celebration of the Etag Festival every February.


All photos by Edgie Polistico are copyrighted. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.




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July 30, 2011

humba (braised pork)

Humba cooked by a relative in Inopacan, Leyte.

 

humba /húm-bâ/ Cebuano, Boholano, Waray, and Tagalog dish;  dw Chin. Hokkien hon bà [highly spiced pork dish] < ho [saucy] + [meat]) [n.] braised fatty pork 

Other local names:
  • a.k.a. humba Bisaya in Cebuano
  • umba in Capampangan

This is a dish of chunky slices of pork, complete with those wobbly thick layers of pork fat and skin. 

To cook, the chunks and fatty slabs of pork are braised in a mixture of vinegar, soy sauce, water, spices (crushed garlic, peppercorn and laurel leaves, etc.), and salt to taste. It is simmered for long hours until the oil from pork fat would exude and blend in the gravy. The meat must be very tender with the pork fat having a jelly-like consistency that would easily wobble when you shake the dish, and when you prick or press it with a fork or table knife, the tines or blunt blade would effortlessly sink into the skin and fat. 

There are now many variations of humba across the country depending on what ingredients are available. In some places of northeastern Mindanao, eastern Visayas, and Laguna, humba is seasoned with tahure, and tausi, and added with skinned peanuts. The Visayans would add peanuts and a spoonful of brown sugar to enhance the texture of every bite and taste.

The humba of Warays in the eastern Visayas has the skin of pork removed before cooking, leaving only the fatty layer and meat in the pot. Skinned peanuts are also added.

A tray of humba sold at an eatery in Panabo City.

Humba is also savored in Luzon that an old version of humba called umba by the Capampangans of Central Luzon (particularly the provinces of Pampanga and Tarlac) and Tagalog region including Metro Manila. Humba in Luzon is cooked with chunks of cracked panocha (concave mold of raw cane sugar) or many spoonfuls of muscovado sugar to enhance the taste. They would also use crushed tahure (salted bean curd) or tausi (black beans) instead of toyo (soy sauce). They also add peanuts, kinchamsay (dried banana blossom), and/or ripe saba banana.

Some local Chinese restaurants in Metro Manila originally add kinchamsay to this dish.

In Iba, Zambales, humba has chunks or big slices of very ripe saba banana (Philippine plantain). 

In Iba, Zambales, humba has big slices of very ripe saba (plantain) banana.

Reheating the humba for several days (at least for 2 to 3 days) on low fire for at least an hour and occasionally turning over the meats would render the dish more flavorful, more tender, and tastier. When reheating, a little more water mixed with little more vinegar and soy sauce may be added to keep the dish saucy and the meat from getting fried by the pork lard. The more humba is reheated, the more delectable it would be.

Learn to cook with this simple humba recipe


All photos by Edgie Polistico are copyrighted. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.




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Continue to follow my blogs. You can also follow and learn more by joining us in our Facebook group. Have more bits and pieces about our kind of food, ingredients, and ways of cooking, dining, and knowing food culture across the 7,641 islands of the Philippines.

Encouragement and enthusiasm are not enough. I also need moral support, prayers, and anything else that can uplift my spirit and keep my good reasons. Keep them coming. All I know is that I am happy with what I am sharing and giving away. If you are pleased and happy with what I am doing, just smile and please share the happiness. Keep sharing and include to share the PHILIPPINE FOOD ILLUSTRATED. I feel energized when my blog becomes one of the reasons why you are happy and smiling. 

Edgie Polistico 


February 12, 2011

walkman


walkman /wok'-man/ (Tagalog delicacy) [n.] pig's ear barbecue

Other local names:

  • a.k.a. taenga ng baboy BBQ or tenga ng baboy BBQ in Tagalog. BBQ here is read as "barbecue".

Walkman is a popular colloquial name for tainga ng baboy barbecue from the 1980s until the early 2020s. 

The ears of pigs are scalded, shaven well, and the outer skin scrapped off. This process is often done while the slaughtered pig is still at the abattoir. But barbecue makers would and must clean it further well. 

The cleaned ears are then sliced into bite-size and soaked in the marinade for at least an hour or allowed to stand overnight in the refrigerator. The marinade could be a simple solution of vinegar, soy sauce, pounded peppercorn, and crushed cloves of garlic. The flavor could be enhanced by adding some muscovado or brown sugar, juice calamansi juice (Philippine round lime), and laurel leaf. 

The marinated ears are then skewered in sharp-pointed bamboo stick, then grilled over red-hot charcoal embers, occasionally turned over, and basted with basting sauce, oil, or with the remaining marinade, until the barbecue are seared.

Pig's ear BBQ got its colloquial name “walkman” after it alluded to that an iconic pocket-size portable-listening gadget popularly known by the same name "Walkman," paired with a set of wired earphones, first invented in Japan in 1979 and reached the United States in 1980 and into the Philippines a year later. The Sony Walkman of Sony Corp went popular in the Philippines in the early 80s and was a fad in the streets of Metro Manila and then to the rest of the country. It was then that tainga ng baboy BBQ (pig's ear barbecue) was named walkman alluding with a jest to one's ears that listen to Sony Walkman.
 
Eventually, the popularity of the Sony Walkman gadget and the walkman barbecue waned when iPod was introduced in 2001 and then the iPhone in 2007 which eventually put Sony Walkman away as a thing of the past as years went by. Walkman as a colloquial name for Filipino pig's ear barbecue also faded its usage in the co-terminus with the Sony Walkman gadget. Filipinos gradually forget walkman and the barbecue got back its vernacular name tainga ng baboy BBQ and that is what it is fondly called again now. 

Tenga ng baboy BBQ of Victoria's Grille. I got this at the Mercato Centrale one weekend at the Bonifacio High Street parking area in Bonifacio Global City (The Fort), Taguig City.

Cooking tip
To help soften the meat of the BBQ, add the marinade with few drops of extracted juice from pounded ginger roots or the extracted whitish resin that comes out from the skin of pricked fresh green papaya fruit. These extracts can also be used in stewing or braising hard-to-cook meats. It will effectively loosen the meat off the bones and the tissues to separate. 



References:


All photos by Edgie Polistico are copyrighted. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.




If you liked this post, share it.

Let us know your opinion on the subject. Feel free to comment in the comment section, below. It is important for us to know what you think.

Tell us what other topics you would like us to write, share, and discuss. 


For more about Filipino food, see  this Philippine Food, Cooking, and Dining Dictionary. It is OPEN and FREE.



Continue to follow my blogs. You can also follow and learn more by joining us in our Facebook group. Have more bits and pieces about our kind of food, ingredients, and ways of cooking, dining, and knowing food culture across the 7,641 islands of the Philippines.

Encouragement and enthusiasm are not enough. I also need moral support, prayers, and anything else that can uplift my spirit and keep my good reasons. Keep them coming. All I know is that I am happy with what I am sharing and giving away. If you are pleased and happy with what I am doing, just smile and please share the happiness. Keep sharing and include to share the PHILIPPINE FOOD ILLUSTRATED. I feel energized when my blog becomes one of the reasons why you are happy and smiling. 

Edgie Polistico 

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