Filipino recipes and Filipino food
About Filipino Food
More than seven thousand islands, with multiple cultures and scattered geographies, make up the Philippines. Simple, tropical cuisine is the backdrop for a series of native dishes, adapted to suit the country's varied geography. Seafood (mainly fish) comprises the basic food group for indigenous Filipino cuisine, as well as chicken, pork, citrus fruits, garlic, onion and tomatoes, with rice as a staple.
Over time, foreign influences have shaped Filipino food, with a blend of Chinese, Spanish, Mexican, American and Malay cuisines. Signature ingredients of South-East Asian neighbours are also present, including coconuts and a pungent fish sauce called patis; however Filipinos aren’t as liberal with their use of chillies.
Several dishes represent the native cuisine, including adobo, which can be made with a mix of chicken, pork, squid, or vegetables; stewed in vinegar, with garlic, peppercorns and bay leaves. Adobo is enjoyed countrywide, often soupy with soy sauce and garlic; some regions use annatto, produced from the reddish pulp of the tropical achiote tree, for colouring; and southern regions use coconut cream as a flavour variation. It is believed that the name was borrowed from the Spanish dish adobo, a garlic and oil based marinade, following the Spaniards invasion of the Philippines in the late 16th century.
Day to day, sinigang, a slightly sour broth, is served in households across the Philippines with a tart flavour derived from unripe guavas, tamarind leaves/flowers, kamias (firm sour fruit) or tomatoes. Variations include sinigang na isda, a sour vegetable soup with fish, or sinigang na baboy, which is served with pork and vegetables.
But one of the most popular native dishes is lechon, spit roasted pig, which may be Chinese in influence but bears a Spanish name. A whole roast pig (or piglet) is slowly roasted over live coals, basted regularly and served with a sauce made from the pig’s liver, simmered with vinegar, sugar and herbs.
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Key Ingredients
Filipino Food
Make sure your kitchen is stocked with these essential ingredients.
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Filipino Utensils
Find out which special utensils you’ll need on hand during cooking.
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Filipino Restaurants
Displaying 2 of 2 Filipino Restaurants.
| Restaurant | Suburb | |
| 1. | De Bortoli Winery and Restaurant | Dixons Creek |
| 2. | Mabuhay | Darwin |
Featured Food & Recipes

Hot Tips
Rescuing burnt chocolate
To melt chocolate break it into small pieces and place in a large heatproof bowl suspended over a small saucepan of just simmering water. Make sure the bottom of the bowl is not touching the water. Stir constantly and remove as soon as all the chocolate is melted.
Glossary
Baklawa
This popular Greek and Turkish pastry is made from layers of filo pastry, nuts, and honey. It is then baked and spiced lemon-honey syrup is poured over the pastry and left to soak into the layers.


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