April 26, 2015

pakbol


pakbol - /pak-bol/ (Maranao snack) [n.] fried cassava-coated plantain.


The cassava root is peeled, grated into pulp, and squeezed the juice out. The extracted juice is discarded away. A handful of cassava pulp is pressed between palms and molded flat into a mat. A peeled rareripe saba (plantain) is placed in the middle of the flattened cassava pulp and then rolled altogether until the banana is entirely wrapped in the cassava pulp. Pakbol is deep-fried in cooking oil until cooked or golden brown.

When serving, pakbol is pressed and rolled on a bed of white or brown sugar.



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biyaki


biyaki /bi-ya-kî/ (Maranao snack) [n.] steamed cassava with young corn.



The cassava roots are peeled, grated, pounded, then mixed with grated young corn kernels and sugar.


A ladle scoop of the mixture is rolled in banana leaf (or cornhusk) and then folded on both ends, forming a rectangular thick packet. 


The packets are boiled for about an hour in a pot half-filled with water or until biyaki is cooked.



All photos by Edgie Polistico are copyrighted.

ALL RIGHTS RESREVED.


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





daludal


Bundles of daludal in Santiago City Isabela public market.
daludal /da-lú-dal/ (Ilocano vegetable) [n.] taro runner.

takway in Negrense, Capizeño, & Tagalog
pusaw in Maranao

 

It is the long stalk of a young taro runner that grows away sideward from the mother plant. A newly sprouting stalk of gabi (taro) that is slender with an unopened young leaf.

Dadulal is often taken and used in cooking as a vegetable and is referred to as the Philippine native asparagus. It is harvested and cooked into a variety of vegetable dishes, much like that of Ilocano aba.

In Negros and Panay islands where it is called takway, it is often boiled and then seasoned with suka (vinegar) and asin (salt) or included in making Ilonggo laswa (boiled assorted vegetables).
A vendor cleaning some takways she is selling at Silay City public market during one of my travels in the province of Negros Occidental.

 


A heap of takway being sold on the sidewalk of Silay City public market in one of my travels in Negros Occidental province.

The stalks can also be cooked with coconut milk to become ginataan or made into adobo by simmering the cutlets in vinegar and soy sauce with or without sagpaw or sahog.

The peeled takway. Just wash them clean and they are ready for cooking


All photos by Edgie Polistico in this blog are copyrighted. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.




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


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