dinengdeng, glorious dinengdeng!

I'm a typical Ilokano who can't live without dinengdeng, come share my passion...

various authentic, exotic, ilokano pinakbets

Concoction or variations of this kind of exotic Ilokano dish, of this ever ubiquitous vegetable stew...

sinanglaw? paksiw? which?

What do you prefer, Vigan-sinanglaw or Laoag-paksiw? What about pinapaitan and singkutsar?

unnok/ginukan, freshwater shellfish

Want some unnok soup or ginukan bugguong?

baradibud a tugi, lesser yam vegetable stew

Tugi, for some, is only meant to be boiled and eaten simply as is. But for me, it's an indispensable ingredient for yet another hearty Ilokano dish...

Showing posts with label Carabeef. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Carabeef. Show all posts

11/13/2020

imbaliktad and other favorite ilokano meat soup dishes

Here are some delicious (to ogle, reminisce, crave for, and contemplate upon) photographs of the Ilokano favorite meat soup dish called imbaliktad.













For more Ilokano meat dishes, you can follow Ilokano Food page on Facebook and enjoy more sumptuous photos of pinapaitan, sinanglaw, imbaliktad and others!

Follow also Ilokano Food @ Instagram and subscribe to Ilokano Food YoutTube channel for more photos, videos, and stories about Ilokano food, cooking, cuisine, and culture.


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More meat soup dishes:



11/11/2020

pinapaitan, sinanglaw: favorite ilokano meat dish bitter and/or sour(ed) soups

Here are some delicious (to ogle, reminisce, crave for, and contemplate upon) photographs of Ilokano favorite meat dishes and essentials, of pinapaitan, sinanglaw and variations and versions.

Pinapaitan a kalding.

Pinapaitan/sinanglaw a kalding.


Pinapaitan a baka.

Pinapaitan a kalding.


Pinapaitan a baka.

Pinapaitan a baka.

Pinapaitan a nuang.

Pinapaitan a baka.

Pinapaitan a nuang.

Pinapaitan/sinanglaw a baka.

Pinapaitan a kalding.

Pinapaitan a baka.

Pinapaitan a nuang.

Sinanglaw.

Sinanglaw.

Pinapaitan a baka.

Pinapaitan a baka.

Pinapaitan a baka.

Sinanglaw.

Sinanglaw.

Sinanglaw.


For more Ilokano meat dishes, you can follow Ilokano Food page on Facebook and enjoy more sumptuous photos of  pinapaitan, sinanglaw, imbaliktad and others!

Follow also Ilokano Food @ Instagram and subscribe to Ilokano Food YoutTube channel for more photos, videos, and stories about Ilokano food, cooking, cuisine, and culture.

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More meat soup dishes:



10/30/2013

kappukan nga addaan silet, raw beef with tripes

Kappukan nga addaan silsilet.
Kappukan (also called ata-ata), raw beef tender loin meat, is usually prepared as is, meat only, uncooked of course, freshly sweet and incredibly delicious, with only salt and onions, and chili.

Or with a blanched pespes (pinespes, also called papait) or fresh bile added and diluted for bitter-loving Ilokano folks, and in some preparation, bits of liblibro and tualtualia (beef tripes, or the black insides of the large intestines that resembles “pages of a book,” and “towel”, hence the name), and raw beef liver.

Or with silet (isaw, the small intestines, technically also tripe), cooked rare or medium rare (blanched or slightly boiled).

The meat and offal for beef kappukan can be obtained right in the slaughter house, to assure you of its freshness, from newly butchered cows. Here, this is the municipal slaughter house of Sanchez Mira, Cagayan:

There’s the liblibro at the bottom, left:

These are pespes ready in cellophane sachets, to be paired with every purchase of meat and offal for pinapaitan, imbaliktad, or kappukan:

And here’s the beef for kappukan—the meat, the liblibro, the tualtualia, and the silet:

Cutting up, mincing up. The silet is slightly boiled to tenderize it a bit and remove its raw smell. The liblibro and tualtualia are to be raw, okey, scald it quickly, but don’t boil it:

Mix the kappukan thoroughly, season with salt and pepper and toss it with sliced red onions and minced chili (optional). Boil the pespes and let it cool first before adding to the mixture. Don’t put in vinegar or even calamansi, as the sourness will “cook” the meat, this is supposed to be kappukan or ata-ata so it should be raw and fresh meat. You can opt to have vinegar with fermented chili if you want to and just dip the kappukan in it.

Enjoy it with your favorite drink!


Here are more recent kappukans I'm opportuned to have partaken with buddies:
Preparing kappukan a nuang (carabeef). Note the liblibro and tualtualia.

Kappukan a nuang.


Another carabeef kappukan, papait to the extreme.

Kappukan a baka.

Another beef kappukan. Note the raw liver.

Kappukan a baka.

Pure beef meat kappukan, no tripes.


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9/04/2013

"assorted" carabeef soup (lauya and pinapaitan)

"Assorted" (mixed pinapaitan and lauya)
at Papaitan & Laoya Sa Triangle, Libag, Tuguegarao City

Wonder what's new in Tuguegarao City's gastronomic concerns, or, rather, culinary offering, if any--besides the old and classic and way ubiquitous pancit batil patong?

Well, its the proliferation of so-called "papaitan and laoya" in the city's roadsides and outskirts and the kind of innovative "assorted" thing that came out of the two meat soup dishes. I've been only going to one eatery serving both, pinapaitan and lauya, and been trying the "assorted" concoction at random because I most prefer pinapaitan just for the heck that I love beef or carabeef (carabao) soup only when it's bitter.

But what the heck ngarud is this "assorted" (sic)? Simply put, it's an "assortment" of the various meaty and offal pieces of pinapaitan and lauya mixed into one unique dish--the "assorted." The tastiness and essence of the mostly bony parts of the beef (well, carabao meat is the usual red meat and the most preferred here in these parts) boiled for hours, and the bitterness of the pinapaitan courtesy of the beast's bile or the pespes (extract of the masticated grass inside the small intestines).

One of the popular "papaitan (sic) and laoya (sic)" and therefore, "assorted", destination in the city is found in Barangay Libag south of the city's centro. Wedged in a fork of the national highway and the diversion road to the city:


For Php50, you'll have a complete meal of either pinapaitan or lauya, or of the "assorted" mix. What's special in this eatery is that the rice is unlimited, you can order more rice if you're not really concerned of your abs. Note that they also offer batil patong, this is actually originally a panciteria:


And here's the lauya cuts simmering (actually preboiled for hours the render the tough meat tender and tasty), hot and ready for orders:


The pinapaitan pieces is being cut:


The soups are kept hot atop live coals:


This is the lauya soup:


And this here's the pinapaitan soup:

The "assortment":


We ordered "assorted", of course, and here's how it's being prepared--half/half. On the bowl, half pinapaitan pieces, half lauya pieces; half pinapaitan broth, half lauya broth. Kind of nice mixture:


Customers flock the small eatery, and most are having the "assorted":


Our orders are served:


The soup, turned darkly greenish, is overwhelmed by the pinapaitan essence, the bitterness is just mild though because of the lauya's more meat-and-bone-flavored dominance:


And the delightful consumption has began--we were eager to sip the hot soup first as a sort of an entrée, and of course, spiced it with that obligatory chili in vinegar: 


We are gourmands, or perhaps just so hungry, we ordered a zinagan (dinardaraan, dinuguan) as an added dish; this one's a crispy dinardaraan:

So, the meal is complete, and so, on to eating:


Here's my own messy labay:


We spiced our "assorted" too much with the fiery chili that we were hot and sweating and resorted to having an ice-cold soda--yet another no-no for me but just for this chance, I indulged completely:

Come to Tuguegarao, and let's go "assorting" again!