Esta es una exhibición prevé de cómo se va ver la receta de 'Dinakdakan' imprimido.

Receta Dinakdakan
by Ang Sarap

I spent 2 1/2 years of my college life in Baguio a mountain city located in the Northern Part of the Philippines which is a part of the Cordillera Administrative Region and located just beside Ilocos Region, though this city is not a part of the Ilocos Region its cuisine is widely influenced by the neighbouring provinces that is why you see a lot of dishes like pinakbet, dinengdeng, bagnet, igado, pipian and pinapaitan in Baguio to name some. Ilocano cuisine for me is exotic as it can contain ingredients that you might never had heard of or not had thought using. They a lot of unusual vegetables and even exotic meats and here are some examples.

Offal of different animals such as pig, goat and beef. Where it not just limited to intestines, kidneys, skin and tripe as blood and bile are used for flavouring soups and stews.

Some insects such as crickets and ant eggs.

Lots of uncommon vegetables and flowers like Saluyot (Jute Leaves), Bitter Gourd, Bitter Gourd Leaves, Bottle Gourd, Malunggay (Moringa), Kalabasa Blossoms (Squash Blossoms), Alokon blossoms (Birch Flower), Amaranth leaves, Talinum, Kinilnat (West-Indian pea blossoms), Winged beans, Banana Blossoms and Parda beans to name some.

And Dogs, yes during the 1990′s I still see dog’s meat sold on Baguio Markets.

Their dishes do not look presentable as well and it will be a mission to plate them but trust me don’t judge it by the looks as they all do taste really good, in fact the best vegetable dishes for me comes from this cuisine. The flavours are totally unique but can be easily unlikable to the untrained palate.

I guess that 2 to 3 years stay on Baguio gave me lots of experience in terms of different cooking techniques as their style is so much different compared to the rest of the country, I even have vivid memories of some of my culinary adventures and one in particular is when we cooked a native chicken as the locals said the meat is tougher but way much tastier compared to the normal ones that are farmed. Native chicken are bought alive so we have to do everything from killing it to dressing the poultry, they come way much cheaper as well and that is so helpful as a college student who does not have that much money. That was the first time I saw how a live chicken was prepared, the experience was somehow funny and scary at the same time. After my Ilocano friend beheaded the poor chicken, it escaped and ran a couple of meters without its head, then it dropped dead after several seconds. After he was sure it was not moving he then let the blood drip in an uncooked rice on a plate and let it clot so it forms a something like a rice cake, the moment it hardened it was cut into smaller pieces. While dressing the chicken we noticed that it has some eggs still inside, lots of them roughly around a dozen and it’s not fully formed and all I saw were yolks without the shells, it was then separated and set aside. Internal organs were removed and cleaned specially the intestines and the gizzard then the meat was cut up into pieces. All of the chicken parts were used except for the head and feathers of course, that means from the blood rice down to the chicken feet, the dish we cooked was tinola but a very exotic version and the result was so good, in fact that was the best tinola I even tasted but the cooking time was so long due to the tough chicken meat.

Ingredients

Method

1. In a pot add pork, garlic, freshly ground black pepper, bay leaf and salt. Pour water enough for boiling the meat. Cover the pot then bring to a boil, simmer for 45 minutes or until meat is really tender

2. Remove from pot then drain pork pieces.

3. Place meat into a grilling pan then grill until charred and partly crispy.

4. Cut pork pieces into small pieces then place on a mixing bowl. Toss in ginger, chillies, onions, freshly ground black pepper, mayonnaise, vinegar and salt.

5. Place in a large platter then serve.

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