Category Archives: Lasang Pinoy
Lasang Pinoy Sundays # 25… Saucy
When Ces of Spices started hosting this weekly Filipino food photography, she always have encouraged me to join. After all I have been active with the Lasang Pinoy “Filipino Taste” events before but fickle minded as I am, I never posted anything but I always check what’s going on by the time I find something to post, Sunday gone again.
So am not missing this one, she might not ask me for crazy ideas anymore, lol. This week’s theme is SAUCY… sounds so sexy isn’t it.
This is not strictly a Filipino food am posting, rather a Greek food. But when one thinks of kokinisto, it’s almost similar to the Filipino menudo sans liver.

Kokinisto means reddened, red sauce in Greek. It might be pork, chicken, veal, beef cooked in red sauce. Nostimo… Yummy!!!
saging pinaypay, a childhood favourite

“Your eating habit is not Filipino anymore!!”… Thats what my Filipina (rather Cebuana) crew mate had said after over a month of working and living together.
Marica and I met in Antibes, France last year. I was walking near the port, when she tapped my shoulder and asked if I was from the Philippines. I said yes, from Cebu. She turned out to be Cebuana too.
We barely got to know each other, her yacht left for Greece and Turkey and we went to Italy and Croatia. I saw her few more times in Antibes towards the end of the season last year as she was getting off in Spain before heading back to the Philippines.
Little did I know then I would be in Florida in the next few weeks.The very day we arrived from the Bahamas and entered the yard at West Palm Beach, there she was waving at me…. screaming at the top of her voice…”Shalimarrrrrrrrrrrr”
Pinch , pinch was I day dreaming? We just did 25 hours passage from Exumas and so exhausted after 5 weeks trip. Is that really Marica? Oh boy, it was her and she actually had seen me in Nassau.
To make the story short, I flew out to UK for a short break, when I came back, she and my Captain has just started going out. Thats how she has become of our crew and been feeding me Filipino food ever since then.
Perhaps even help me gain few kilos with our day to day kitchen escapades.
So on one dreary wet afternoon while we were in West Palm, I asked her what she was going to do with the plantain she bought. I made ” lambing” to her if she could make me SAGING PINAYPAY.
Lambing in our language literally translates to show affection and tenderness.
She laughed and gave me a hug…. saging pinaypay… is one of the easiest Filipino food to do. She laughed the way I asked to do for me and yes with lots of affection, she sweetly made me some
Saging (banana) pinaypay (to fan out.. paypay is fan). You slice the bananas thinly, spread it out to form a fan, dip in a batter and fry. Just before serving, sprinkle it with sugar.
I was almost teary eyed… when Rob our engineer came in and asked what’s that?
Dreamily, I replied:
A childhood favourite…….
Dinuguan: Pork Blood Stew LP#9

Pabumum our host for the Lasang Pinoy 9th edition had chosen the theme Lamang-loob: Odd Cuts and Guts.
In Tagalog, laman [la’man] translates to “contents,” and loob [lo’ob] means inside–I want to feature the contents inside of an animal, or what is commonly referred to as offal. Using the “waste” parts of a butchered animal has always been part of the human diet. Growing up in the Philippines, our parents told us that offal protected us from being ill and whenever my non-Filipino friends travel back home with me, my relatives tell them that offal’s good for “many children.”
Oh well how can I miss this event but before I go on I just hope you understand my predicament of not having my own internet connection… not yet.
I have no choice at the moment but to slowly withdraw from this blogging sphere when this Lasang Pinoy is on its 9the edition came up.
Before we go on with our theme this month, let me brief you all my whereabouts. I arrived here in Antibes, France last March 28th due to the fact I was asked to show up in San Remo, Italy for an interview and trial work.
How you feel when going for an interview and it just did not feel so right?
The very same day I came back to France after hours of spending time between train stations (that time there was a daily strike here), I was called to drop by to the port and see a another boat.

my view….. thats where i “live” for the time being Port Vauban, Antibes.
Well the 2 weeks trial turned out to be a job offer. One thing I asked from the boss is an internet connection. Living and working aboard is really not so easy for some of you to comprehend.
To have a WiFi, would mean paying a land line, the boat could not easily just go to French telecom, we have to do it with the port. So at this moment the captain is finding the best option for us.
At the mean time I walk over half an hour to the internet café where some keyboards are in French and in Arabic. After days of using the keyboard the fingers are now used to the positioning of the French keyboard that when I use my laptop I mess it all up.
Is it worth my 3€ an hour, tolerating a smoking internet café for this Lasang Pinoy?
The answer is yes. It’s all worth it.
Why? Because as most of you know I find this monthly event a valuable lesson to me.
A learning process of my culture and getting to know more of the country of my birth through food.
Since I have lived in many places, not all countries sell same kind of offal one Filipino would wish be available in the market.
In UK since I was in the countryside I knew the butcher I could literally get hold of most things I wanted.
In Norway ox tail is available but hard to get fresh liver.
In Athens, the influence of the Filipinos is very strong. At the wet market you can now get head, intestines, blood but not tail.
Here in France its almost available but I just do not know the sources yet.
I grew up in a small town that my grandmother had her own pigs, chickens, ducks, geese, goats (which my mother hated so much because they ate our plants) and some pigeons. What I remember most is when one of us celebrated a birthday, she would offer a chicken or duck. This would mean we would do slaughtering and having all parts of the meat including offal, heart, liver, intestines and blood. My favourite way back then was chicken soup with the blood included.
So I do not really go squeamish when it comes to offal. Other than I grew up eating it, I have learned to clean them. Though I have not cooked much using these parts.
I wanted to cook something I have never done… dinuguan, a pork blood stew.
If I were in Athens now I would have gone to the market and ordered blood, bought the heart, liver and my meat to cook this dinuguan. I have never ever made my own.
There are two Filipina ladies in Athens both in their 70s now that make the kind of dinuguan I love. Slightly thick, rich and a bit spicy. Whenever I go back home I would ask one of them to cook this for me. Had I been home in Athens, I would have bothered one of them to teach me cook this.

boudin noir or blood sausage which you can buy per kilo.
Since am in France for the time being I had to reach out for another friend. Last year when I was in Cannes another friend showed me how she did hers. She used boudin noir (blood sausage) which she mixed her meat with.
I wanted something more traditional. When I met up my friend yesterday I had told him if we could find blood for a more authentic dinuguan but he explained to me that some blood they sell here smells.
I nearly wanted to change my plan to kare kare, ox tail with tripe cooked with peanut butter.
But as you see I really could not demand. I don’t even have my own kitchen, let alone know the shops that sell offal.
So here is what I call a bastardized or rather a frenchified dinuguan using boudin noir.

Ingredients
So let me explain to you how this bastardized dinuguan made here in Antibes. Apparently this is how most Filipinos here in South of France cook their own version.
Easy isn’t it ?
But I will do and cook the proper way of dinuguan when I get back to Athens.
And speaking of offal I am just lucky that the Swiss cheese believes nothing should be wasted with his motto from snout to tail he certainly eats this dinuguan.
Or perhaps when I visit the Philippines again, I would have to ask to slaughter a pig for a lechon then cook the offal, what ever laman loob I can get hold of.
As for my dinuguan, I took my share to the boat. The rest of the crew were away, so I had a leisurely lunch on my own. Dinuguan is served best with hot steaming rice perhaps with good company.
Lasang Pinoy 8 Kusinang Bulilit part 2

I have learnt many about cooking. A friend of my mum named Shalimar has taught me cooking, baking etc. The first time that I try to bake was chocolate fudge, it wasn’t really difficult for me to bake because it was very easy and it has little ingredients on it. But it was really fantastic, baking something because you can learn many things. After baking the chocolate fudge, Shalimar took some pictures.
Menudo ~ Lasang Pinoy # 8

When I was young, cooking was an obligation. There were times when I just hated it.
I was told off a few many times for either over cooking or undercooking the rice.
Those were the times when rice cooker were unheard of.
We had 2 kitchens; one inside with gas, very practical when heaven opened up and it rained non stop, the other one like most houses in the Philippines was the outdoor. It was built on a shed and underneath it wood for cooking was piled up.

Part of my household obligation of course was to collect wood. Our house is surrounded (it is IS: the house still exists) with coconuts. Once a palm branch fell we would chop them and build them into square like tower for drying.
I do have happy memories of my mother and myself in the kitchen together.
Normally on Sundays when we came back from the market, I would eagerly help.
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Puto, Mangga ug Sikwate (Rice Pudding,Mango & Hot Cocoa) – LP 7

Lasang Pinoy 7 theme this month is ALMUSAL… breakfast. Now on its 7th edition hosted by fabulous Joey of 80 Breakfasts.
Did I have a hard time thinking what to prepare? No of course not… I thought of one of my favourites, a breakfast that will take me back to my childhood. My carefree life growing up in a small town of Cebu.
Puto (puto maya in Tagalog) paired with a slice of sweet Cebuano mango and hot chocolate. For the benefit of non Filipino readers, it’s glutinous rice cooked in coconut milk (pretty much like the Thai sticky rice pudding).
Yummy?
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Tuwalya ng Baka at Laman Lamanan ng Baboy (Tripe & Innards Salad) ~ LP#6
Pulutan is a kind of food that is served as accompaniment to a drink. It comes in different kinds like meat, fish, nuts, chips. It’s prepared in different ways…raw, fried, steamed. Basically, it is anything that makes drinking enjoyable. Even a pet might start to look as a pulutan depending on the level of alcohol drinkers(I call them “bingeirs”) have had but that is a different story I would not even like to touch.
Those words were written by our host this month, Aling Ting. Lasang Pinoy # 6 is all about wash it down with the booze!!!!
LP5 Filipino Christmas Around the World via Athens
Filipino Christmas around the world… how we Filipinos in Greece celebrate Christmas? Or how I a Filipina celebrate Christmas away from the Philippines.
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Pork Hocks & No to Plagiarism

Many times I have been asked why I do not have my travel photos on some online gallery for public viewing. Why? Its not because they are not good, the problem is they are far too good that I worry about PLAGIARISM.
Yes plagiarism a common disease in this cyber world, people using your materials and photos with no credit given. But I have not been a victim, not just yet, but two Filipino Food Bloggers have their photos used. Not just online (which was retracted very easy thing to press edit, delete, save, published) but this is the first time that copied photos from blogs ended up in major daily newspaper. Not easy to edit isn’t it when thousand of prints been distributed.
Filipino Soul Food
Lasang Pinoy 4…Soul Food- favorite traditional Filipino food that instantly enhances mood…“soothing, comfort food that brings back warm memories of family dinnersâ€.
I am back here in Athens again and back to my own kitchen. I didn’t want to start blogging soon until this new site is ready. But I just couldn’t miss another
Lasang Pinoy, especially I have learned so much from this group. To think I have left the country at the age of 14, for me Lasang Pinoy is my way of re -connecting and a learning process of authentic Filipino cuisine.
As soon as Karen of The Pilgrims Pots and Pans reminded me, I went straight to Lafang’s List to read
more about Filipino Soul Food
I emailed my sister in London immediately…” ideas for soul food…and be quick†within few minutes she replied , “Malunggay, fried fish malunggay or tinola manok with malunggay.â€
This reminds me Market Manila post on Cebu’s tinowa
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