Adobong Malabon

Adobong Malabon is also known as adobong puti (white adobo) due to the absence of soy sauce. Another name for this is adobo flakes.

Adobong Malabon is a recipe I found in The Best Of Food Magazine (A Cookbook of 180 Recipes For Filipino and International Dishes). The editor, Norma Chikiamco, got this recipe from her in-laws, who hail from Malabon. Unlike other adobo recipes, this does not use soy sauce. The resulting adobo flakes are perfect for eating with garlic-fried rice. Although you may serve this dish immediately after cooking, the favors intensify after being stored overnight in the refrigerator. It is therefore best served, reheated, a day after cooking.

Adobong Malabon is also known as adobong puti (white adobo) due to the absence of soy sauce. Another name for this is adobo flakes.

Beginner cooks can easily make this dish. Just follow the instructions!

The book where I got this recipe is old. It was published in 2001. Other newer Filipino Cookbooks may be found on Amazon.


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Recipe for Adobong Malabon:

Adobong Malabon

Recipe by Yummy FoodCourse: MainCuisine: FilipinoDifficulty: Easy
Servings

8

servings

Adobong Malabon is also known as adobong puti (white adobo) due to the absence of soy sauce. Another name for this is adobo flakes.

Ingredients

  • 1nkilo pork kasim or pigue, cut into large chunks*

  • 1 1/2 cups vinegar

  • 1/2 cup water

  • Coarse salt to taste

  • 1 head of garlic, crushed

  • 2 tablespoons cooking oil

Directions

  • Put the pork in a wok or large pan (use only non-aluminum to prevent a reaction with vinegar). Pour in vinegar and water (meat should be covered halfway).
  • Turn the heat to high. When the mixture boils, lower the heat to simmer. Do not stir the mixture to prevent a “raw” taste in the vinegar.
  • When the pork is slightly cooked, sprinkle salt and garlic all over the pork pieces. Cover and simmer until liquid is absorbed and pork is tender about 40 minutes. Remove pork from the wok.
  • Add oil to the wok and heat for about 1 minute. Stir-fry pork until it turns brown. With a wooden spoon, break apart pork chunks until they become flaky.

Notes

  • *You may use 1 Kilo of sliced chicken, or a combination of pork and chicken.

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Chicken Pochero Recipe

This Chicken Pochero Recipe is a warm and hearty stew that everyone in the family will love.

Chicken Pochero Recipe

This Chicken Pochero Recipe is a warm and hearty stew that everyone in the family will love.

What is Pochero?

Puchero is a type of stew originally from Spain, prepared in Yucatán, Mexico, Argentina, Paraguay, Uruguay, Perú, south of Brazil, the Philippines, and Spain, specifically the autonomous communities of Andalusia and the Canary Islands. The Spanish word “puchero” originally meant an earthenware pot, before being extended to mean any vessel, and then the dish cooked in it.
The dish is essentially equivalent to the cocido of Spain but lacking colorants (such as paprika), using local ingredients which vary from one region to another. In Spain chickpeas are widely used. Puchero, cocido, and the sancocho eaten in Colombia, Ecuador, Dominican Republic, Venezuela and Puerto Rico, are essentially similar dishes.
In Philippine cuisine, puchero (Spanish: Pochero; Tagalog: putsero) is a dish composed of beef chunks stewed with saba bananas (or plantains). The dish may also include potatoes or sweet potatoes, chorizos de Bilbao, bok choy, leeks, chickpeas, cabbage and tomato sauce. Other versions replace beef with chicken or pork.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Puchero

As you can see above, puchero is essentially a beef stew. But for this recipe, we will be using chicken as our main meat.


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Recipe for Chicken Pochero:

Chicken Pochero Recipe

Recipe by Yummy FoodCourse: MainCuisine: FilipinoDifficulty: Medium
Servings

12

servings
Prep time

15

minutes
Cooking time

1

hour 

10

minutes
Total time

1

hour 

25

minutes

This Chicken Pochero Recipe is a warm and hearty stew that everyone in the family will love.

Ingredients

  • 2 Tbsp oil

  • 1 1/2 tsp garlic, chopped

  • 1/3 cup onion, red, chopped

  • 1 pc chicken, whole (approximately 1-1.3 kg), cut into quarters

  • 1 1/2 Tbsp patis

  • 1 pouch DEL MONTE Original Style Tomato Sauce (200g)

  • 1 2/3 cup water

  • 3/4 cup sweet potato/kamote, cut into quarters

  • 1 2/3 cup banana, saba, cut diagonally

  • 3/4 cup green beans, sliced into 2

  • 1 1/2 can pork and beans (230g)

  • 3/4 cup pechay Tagalog

Directions

  • Heat oil. Sauté garlic and onion for 5 minutes.
  • Slightly brown the chicken on all sides. Add patis, cook until dry.
  • Add DEL MONTE Original Style Tomato Sauce and water. Cover and simmer for 20 minutes. Stir occasionally.
  • Once chicken is cooked, add kamote and simmer over medium heat until kamote is tender.
  • Add saba, green beans and pork and beans then simmer for 5 minutes.
  • Add stalks of pechay, once cooked, add pechay leaves and turn off heat.

Notes

  • This Chicken Pochero dish is an excellent source of vitamin A that helps improve vision and keeps the immune system healthy. It also has niacin that helps enzymes work properly in your body.
  • Separate the stalks and leaves of the pechay. The stalks will cook longer than the leaves. Add the stalks first. When cooked, add the leaves and let the residual heat cook the leaves.

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By Diet or Lifestyle: Budget-Friendly | High-Protein | Kid-Friendly

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IMAGE AND RECIPE SOURCE: Life Gets Better



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Easy Pata Tim Recipe

Pata Tim, also spelled patatim, is a Filipino-Chinese dish. It is a braised pork hock dish slow-cooked until very tender in various spices sweetened with sugar.

Easy Pata Tim Recipe

Pata Tim, also spelled patatim, is a Filipino-Chinese dish. It is a braised pork hock dish slow-cooked until very tender in various spices sweetened with sugar. Some vegetables, like pechay and mushrooms, are also added.

The dish is commonly served in Chinese-Filipino restaurants particularly in the City of Manila.

Pata tim, like the more common humba, is derived from the Chinese red braised pork. It is closer to the original dish than humba, in that it sometimes uses Chinese rice wine and other Chinese spices and condiments. However, it is more commonly cooked closer to the Filipino paksiw na pata, but it does not use vinegar or uses only a very small amount of it. Like humba, it can also add common Filipino ingredients like pineapples, banana flowers, saba bananas, and patis. The name is a shortened version of pata itim, literally “black pork hock”, from pata (“pork hock” or “pig’s trotters”) and itim (“black”).

Wikipedia

The most basic pata tim recipe uses what Filipinos call as pata (pork hock in English). Traditionally, pata tim is cooked whole and not chopped. The easy way to cook pata tim, as described below, is to mix all the ingredients together with the pata and simmer until tender. The broth is then used to make the sauce. The recipe used lettuce as garnish but we can replace it with blanched pechay. Then we serve with rice.

This dish could be modified. You may want to broil the pata for 1 to 2 minutes to prevent the skin from shrinking when boiled.

Another option is to pre-boil the pata for around 20 minutes before adding the ingredients. This allows you to remove scum and impurities from the pata. You can discard the water later and continue with the recipe.

For more flavor, some cooks will add pork cubes. This is all entirely up to you.


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Recipe for Pata Tim:

Easy Pata Tim Recipe

Recipe by Yummy FoodCourse: Main CourseCuisine: FilipinoDifficulty: Easy
Servings

4

servings
Prep time

30

minutes
Cooking time

2

hours 
Calories

711

kcal
Total time

2

hours 

30

minutes

Pata Tim, also spelled patatim, is a Filipino-Chinese dish. It is a braised pork hock dish slow-cooked until very tender in various spices sweetened with sugar.

Ingredients

  • 1 kg pork pata (pork’s leg)

  • 5 cloves garlic; crushed

  • 1/4 cup soy sauce

  • 3/4 cup pineapple juice

  • 3/4 cup oyster sauce

  • 1 tablespoon rice wine

  • 1 tablespoon pepper corns

  • 1 red onion; chopped

  • 3 bay leaves

  • Lettuce for garnish (fried for 2 minutes)

  • Sauce:
  • 1 cup broth of pata

  • 5 tablespoons cornstarch

  • Salt to taste

Directions

  • In a stock pot, put enough water to simmer the pork pata (with all the ingredients) until the meat is tender.
  • Add hot water to replace the evaporated liquid, if necessary.
  • Drain and cut the meat from one side and separate the bones. Save 1 cup of broth for the sauce.
  • Place the lettuce in a platter. Put the pata over the lettuce. Set aside.
  • Make the Sauce:
  • In a skillet, combine broth, cornstarch, and salt.
  • Bring to boil until sauce becomes thick.
  • Pour the sauce on top of the pata.
  • Serve hot and enjoy!

Nutrition Facts

4 servings per container

Serving Size550


  • Amount Per ServingCalories711
  • % Daily Value *
  • Total Fat 31.24g 41%
    • Total Carbohydrate 25.52g 10%
      • Dietary Fiber 2.2g 8%
      • Total Sugars 14.4g
    • Protein 68.5g 137%

    • Vitamin A 6mcg 1%
    • Vitamin C 14mg 16%
    • Calcium 14mg 2%
    • Iron 17mg 95%
    • Vitamin D 13mcg 65%
    • Vitamin E 5mg 34%
    • Vitamin K 5mcg 5%
    • Thiamin 146mg 12167%
    • Riboflavin 67mg 5154%
    • Niacin 164mg 1025%
    • Vitamin B6 148mg 8706%
    • Vitamin B12 73mcg 3042%
    • Folate 11mcg 3%
    • Pantothenic Acid 38mg 760%
    • Phosphorus 91mg 8%
    • Magnesium 29mg 7%
    • Zinc 73mg 664%
    • Selenium 207mcg 377%
    • Copper 49mg 5445%
    • Manganese 47mg 2044%

    * The % Daily Value tells you how much a nutrient in a serving of food contributes to a daily diet. 2,000 calories a day is used for general nutrition advice.


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    IMAGE SOURCE: mooglet / CC BY-SA



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    Easy Pork Adobo Recipe

    This easy pork adobo recipe is a favorite Filipino dish. Most Filipinos who are trying to learn how to cook start with Pork Adobo.

    Easy Pork Adobo Recipe

    This easy pork adobo recipe is a favorite Filipino dish. Most Filipinos who are trying to learn how to cook start with Pork Adobo.

    Pork Adobo is well known and common in the Philippines and for Filipinos all over the world. This pork adobo version is cooked using pork belly, garlic, and so irresistibly delicious! This easy pork adobo recipe has a perfect balance of salty, sweet, vinegary goodness, and could easily be a comfort dish.

    Filipino adobo (from Spanish “adobar”) is a popular Filipino dish and cooking process in Filipino cuisine that involves meat, seafood or vegetables marinated in vinegar, soy sauce, garlic and black peppercorns, which is browned in oil and simmered in the marinade. Sometimes it is considered the unofficial national dish of the Philippines.

    There are many variants of adobo all over the Philippines.  This is the most common one and the easiest to cook.


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    Recipe for Pork Adobo:

    Easy Pork Adobo Recipe

    Recipe by Yummy FoodCourse: MAIN COURSECuisine: FilipinoDifficulty: Easy
    Servings

    4

    servings
    Prep time

    10

    minutes
    Cooking time

    1

    hour 

    10

    minutes
    Calories

    1029.4

    kcal
    Total time

    1

    hour 

    20

    minutes

    This easy pork adobo recipe is a favorite Filipino dish. Most Filipinos who are trying to learn how to cook start with Pork Adobo.

    Ingredients

    • 1 kg Pork Belly

    • 2 tbsp Garlic (minced)

    • 5 pieces Dried bay leaves

    • 4 tbsp Vinegar

    • ½ cup Soy Sauce

    • 1 tbsp Peppercorn

    • 2 cups Water

    • Salt (To Taste)

    Directions

    • Combine the pork belly, soy sauce, and garlic then marinade for at least 1 hour.
    • Heat a pot and put-in the marinated pork belly; cook for a few minutes.
    • Pour remaining marinade including garlic.
    • Add water, whole pepper corn, and dried bay leaves then bring to a boil. Simmer for 40 minutes to 1 hour.
    • Add the vinegar and simmer for 12 to 15 minutes.
    • Add salt to taste.
    • Serve hot (best with rice).

    Nutrition Facts

    4 servings per container

    Serving Size1


    • Amount Per ServingCalories1029.4
    • % Daily Value *
    • Total Fat 132.5g 170%
      • Saturated Fat 87.5g 438%
    • Sodium 1797.5mg 79%
    • Potassium 97.6mg 3%
    • Total Carbohydrate 5.1g 2%
      • Dietary Fiber 2.8g 10%
      • Total Sugars 0.2g
    • Protein 54.8g 110%

    • Vitamin C 3.4mg 4%
    • Calcium 3.9mg 1%
    • Iron 8.8mg 49%
    • Thiamin 1.3mg 109%
    • Riboflavin 3.4mg 262%
    • Niacin 3.6mg 23%
    • Vitamin B6 5mg 295%
    • Folate 11mcg 3%
    • Pantothenic Acid 1.2mg 24%
    • Phosphorus 7.1mg 1%
    • Magnesium 6.3mg 2%
    • Zinc 1.4mg 13%
    • Selenium 1.1mcg 2%
    • Copper 2.3mg 256%
    • Manganese 10.3mg 448%

    * The % Daily Value tells you how much a nutrient in a serving of food contributes to a daily diet. 2,000 calories a day is used for general nutrition advice.


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    From Wikipedia:

    While the adobo dish and cooking process in Filipino cuisine and the general description of adobo in Spanish cuisine share similar characteristics, they refer to different things with different cultural roots.  Unlike the Spanish and Latin American adobo, the main ingredients of Philippine adobo are ingredients native to Southeast Asia, namely soy sauce (originally salt), black peppercorns, and bay leaves. It does not traditionally use chilis, paprika, oregano, or tomatoes. Its only similarity to Spanish and Latin American adobo is the primary use of vinegar and garlic. Philippine adobo has a characteristically salty and sour, and often sweet, taste, in contrast to Spanish and Mexican adobos which are spicier or infused with oregano.

    While the Philippine adobo can be considered adobo in the Spanish sense—a marinated dish—the Philippine usage is much more specific to a cooking process (rather than a specific recipe) and is not restricted to meat.  Typically, pork or chicken, or a combination of both, is slowly cooked in vinegar, crushed garlic, bay leaves, black peppercorns, and soy sauce. It is served with white rice.  It was traditionally cooked in small clay pots (palayok or kulon); but in modern times, metal pots or woks (kawali) are used instead.

    There are numerous variants of the adobo recipe in the Philippines.  The most basic ingredient of adobo is vinegar, which is usually coconut vinegar, rice vinegar, or cane vinegar (although sometimes white wine or cider vinegar can also be used). Almost every ingredient can be changed according to personal preference. Even people in the same household can cook adobo in significantly different ways.

    From Wikipedia:

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    By Cooking Method: Sautéing | Simmering

    By Cuisine: Filipino

    By Diet or Lifestyle: Budget-Friendly

    By Dish Type: One-Pot Meals | Soups & Stews

    By Main Ingredient: Pork

    By Meal Type: Dinner | Lunch

    Other Useful Categories: Beginner Recipes | Comfort Food | Soy Sauce-Based Dishes | Traditional & Authentic

    Let me know what you think and enter your comments below!

    IMAGE SOURCE: Joy D. Ganaden, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons



    Beef beginner-friendly budget-friendly Business Idea Chicken Chicken Recipes coconut milk Comfort Food Condensed Milk dairy-free easy recipe eggs Evaporated Milk Filipino Filipino comfort food Filipino cuisine Filipino Dessert Filipino Recipe Flavorful Garlic ginger high-protein kid-friendly Kid Friendly meal prep Merienda olive oil one-pot meal Onion Onions oyster sauce Pork Pork Belly Quick and Easy Salt Savory Shrimp Soy Sauce Sugar Traditional traditional Filipino recipe Vegetables vegetarian Vinegar Weeknight Dinner

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