Category Archives: Filipino Food

Arroz Caldo Dinner, New Year’s Day

Arroz caldo is a Filipino rice porridge in a chicken base, a popular dish to celebrate the New Year 
because the expansion of the rice when cooked symbolizes growth and prosperity.

Chop up some garlic, onions and ginger.

An uncle once said, “The secret to making good arroz caldo is to wash the chicken very, very well.”
It really makes a difference.

Washed chicken pieces.
Saute garlic, ginger and onions until garlic is brown and onions are clear.

Add chicken and coat with oil.

Add rice.
The chef says that the secret is to coat the rice with all the sauteed chicken goodness.
Add broth and simmer on low heat for two hours, skimming the top every so often.
Chop up some scallions for topping.

Key toppings include scallions, fried garlic, lemon juice.

For the occasion we opened a 2003 Cakebread Cab we’ve had since a Napa trip in 2006.

For appetizers we had rye crackers, truffle honey and Hungarian duck liver pate.

Drizzle some good stuff.

I love these hand-carved glasses.

Ladle on the arroz.

Nothing compares to this.

Aling Rosing’s Chicken Arroz Caldo

1/2 head garlic, chopped
1 yellow onion, chopped
1 medium sized ginger, sliced into strips
10 chicken pieces, washed and dried
2 cup white jasmine rice
2 chicken bouillons
bottled fried garlic
scallions, chopped
lemon slices
fish sauce
In a 10 liter stock pot, saute ginger, garlic and onion until onion is clear. Add chicken pieces and coat with oil for about five minutes. Add rice and coat with oil. This is a very important step that allows the rice to take in the flavors of the chicken and oil. Allow to cook for five minutes, stirring to prevent sticking to the pot. Add bouillons and water up to three-fourths the pot’s height (7.5 liter mark). Simmer on low heat while mixing often to prevent sticking. Do not allow to boil over. Cook for about two hours until rice is broken. This version results in a soupy kind of arroz caldo, so add more rice if you want it coarse and thick like a risotto. Top with scallions, fried garlic and lemon juice. This recipe is huge (serves eight), so adjust portions accordingly for a smaller pot.
Enjoy!

Christmas Ham

I’ve made a Christmas ham since my teenage years in the Philippines and continued the tradition when I moved to New York, developing my recipe to use locally available ingredients. This ham is popular among Filipinos but is a general crowd pleaser as well. It’s always festive and very easy and inexpensive to make. Total cost for this is around $20.

Ingredients:

Whole smoked pork butt, sized according to one’s stockpot capacity
1 big can pineapple juice
1 small 1-pound box Domino’s dark brown sugar
1 big can pineapple slices
1 small can crushed pineapple
1/4 cup dried cloves
10 or so pieces Maraschino cherries
Green garnish leaves such as parsley, brocollini, etc.

Instructions:

Remove plastic packaging from ham and place in a stockpot. Set aside one cup of brown sugar. Into the pot add pineapple juice, the rest of the brown sugar, and cloves. Simmer on low heat for 1 hour. Cool and refrigerate pot with soaking ham for 1-2 days. On day of occasion, simmer pot for 1-2 hours on low heat and then set on glass baking dish. Create a mixture of crushed pineapple and brown sugar moistened with the soaking sauce and coat ham. Sprinkle more brown sugar and cloves on top and bake uncovered for 1 hour at 375F. Remove promptly and arrange in round decorative dish with pineapples, cherries, and garnish leaves (as in photo).

Sauce: Reduce soaking sauce in stock pot on medium heat until 1/2 original amount. Add sugar to taste or to thicken. Slice ham thinly and serve topped with warm sauce.

Mangia!

Favorite Things: Ihawan Indulgences

Ihawan Restaurant (70th & Roosevelt in Woodside, Queens) is the place to go for authentic Filipino food in New York. Known for their pork barbecue skewers, we also frequent this place their other specialties, namely Daing na Bangus (fried milkfish), Crispy Pata (fried pork knuckles), and sisg (sizzling pork facial muscles and ear).

The Daing is perfectly fried and the serving is very generous. Served whole and butterflied and deboned, it is a favorite breakfast treat eaten with rice and dipped in spiced vinegar.

The Crispy Pata is just fried pork personified. The photo is self-explanatory.

And finally, the Sizzling Sisig is an explosion of taste. A famous drinking dish, finely chopped cheek muscles are sauteed in onions and sprinkled with lemon juice before serving. I don’t think you’ll find anything quite like it.
I’ve lived in NY for a decade and have sampled several restaurants in the tri-state area, but nothing comes close to Ihawan in authenticity and value. And I haven’t even mentioned the avocado shake yet! (Say what?!) Notice I didn’t mention anything about decor and ambience. It’s a Filipino restaurant. What do you want? 
Mangia!

Bean Sprout Lumpia (Lumpiang Toge)

Lumpiang Toge (Bean Sprout Spring Roll) is one of the comfort foods I grew up with. Street vendors served them out of baskets of fried food, along with a bottle of spiced vinegar you can use to douse the lumpia to your heart’s content.

Filling: firm tofu, snap peas, mung bean sprouts sauteed in garlic and onion.

I’ve learned to make lumpia using mung bean sprouts and when I can find them, ones simply labeled “crunchy sprouts.” I’m not really sure what beans they originate from, but I sure like the added crunch and coarse texture they give the roll.

The filling is made by sauteing garlic and onions, browning some tofu and adding the sprouts as well as any other vegetables you might want to add (julienned string beans, snap peas, carrots). Stirfry until almost cooked then season with salt, pepper, and if available to you, a drizzle of fish sauce. Drain the vegetables and wrap in spring roll wrapper, then fry until brown. Incidentally, spring rolls are an ingenious way of using leftover vegetable stirfry, as long as the ingredients are chopped well and are dry.

I like serving mine with spiced vinegar, crushed garlic, and soy sauce. Just like home.

Mangia!

(Photos by Kanako Shimura)


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