Monday, November 28, 2022

An acquired taste: Dishes that define Bayambangueño cuisine

A Survey of Local Culinary Traditions

Lying in the southern central part of Pangasinan province, Bayambang might be called a crossroads town. Being geographically at the tip means it is a natural doorway to the province and to the rest of Region I (Ilocandia) and conversely a busy exit point toward the vast fertile plains of Central Luzon. It is therefore inevitable that, while Bayambang's central location makes it a part of the heartland of Pangasinan culture, it is also most prone to outside influences.

Its current demographic can only reflect this reality, as the local culture resulted into an amalgam of influences – from Ilocanos, Tagalogs, Pampangos, and other ethnic groups.

It is only logical that, viewed from the perspective of the vastly diverse nature of Philippine cuisine, Bayambangueño cuisine would be mostly a combination of Pangasinan and Ilocano dishes together with the rest of the major foreign influences in Filipino cuisine (Spanish, Chinese, American, etc.).

Traditional dishes that are considered to be definitively Bayambangueño are characterized by being organic and healthy without being consciously seen as such (albeit with the exception of the sodium- and sugar-laden items). Apart from that, the resulting flavor profile is quite hard to pin down precisely because the local cuisine is a complex combination of influences, like in all other Philippine towns. But there is no dearth of unique features here and there. Before the ready availability of regional food and the influence of globalization, there was a local culinary tradition that one can easily tell apart from those outside the confines of the town.


For everyday fare, the simplest dishes and cooking techniques are preferred on purpose, but this is not to say that the local palate is naive to complicated tastes, for it is highly sensitive to flavor, as evidenced by indigenous terms for various tastes and textures.

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Taway tan Nanam: Local Words for Taste and Texture

 As in other subjects, the local language of Pangasinan has very specific terms in gastronomy, particularly words for taste and food texture. The vocabulary for taste goes beyond the basics of masamit (sweet), maasin or maaplar (salty), anapseng or anakseng (sour), ampait (bitter), and anagasang (hot and spicy). Nuances in taste are evident in various terms.

Maasngal is the overpowering taste of excessive use of certain ingredients like carrots, bell pepper, malunggay leaves, etc. Maablir is the undesirably earthy taste of milkfish raised in non-ideal conditions. Ampasager is mapakla or the annoying taste of certain unripe fruits, leaving a sticky, gummy sensation in the mouth and tongue. Abaliw means fermented, maali means rancid like cooking oil that turned bad, abulok is rotten, malangsi is fishy, aluto is ripe (as in fruit), aluto-luto is overripe, maanggo is gamey. Tostado is toasted, atektek is toasted beyond desired doneness, and apugit is burnt.

Mananam means delicious in the sense of being full of umami. Masamit is also used to mean delicious, even if the food is not sweet (masamit). Magata means creamy (gata usually means coconut milk).

The terms for nakakasawa (Tagalog) or cloying are also many: makapaumay, makapalunit (used for overly rich food), makapatama (used for fatty food), makapasawa (general term). Makapagew (pagew means breast) means having the taste of arnibal (syrup) or being overly sweet. In general, an excess of any flavor is deemed mataway (taway means taste) or matapang. In contrast, the lack of a desired flavor is described as matabang. This set of terms suggests that, local cuisine (just like Filipino cuisine in general) is all about studied minimalism, simplicity and restraint, when it comes to mixing flavors. In a given dish, just one or a few spices dominate or punctuate the flavor profile instead of having layers of richness like in other Asian cuisines.

A curious term is mataldit, used to describe food that one least likes or not likely to taste again. In contrast, there is the term malamlam, which refers to food so good that one wants to have it again and again.

Masabeng is used to refer to a dish that has too much leafy ingredient. Makapailol (ilol means saliva) is used to describe the mouth-watering quality of food one is craving -- or not even, as in the mere thought of crisp green Indian mangoes.

As for texture or consistency... Anawet means hard, while alemek or anlemek means soft. Ambasa is wet, while amaga is dry. Ambâbasa is slightly wet, while amagamaga is very dry. Manpikat or manpikkat is used to refer to a certain degree of viscous wetness: a bit wet with sticky portions -- though this term is not often used for food. Mabuwer, magara, or magaralagar is sandy, while mabato means has stony impurities, like in rice and monggo beans. Mabago is furry or feathery. Pino means fine, while magasal means rough or unrefined. Makulnet means sticky and gummy at the same time, while makulaney (literally weak in other contexts) means soft or has very little resistance when chewed, as in high-quality rice. Mapeket is sticky. Masalangsang means crunchy, while matalker means tough. Magalasagas and other onomatopoeic terms (makalasakas, magalareger, etc.) may refer to textures between crunchy and spongy. Mapalet is malapot (thick or dense), while malasaw is malabnaw (thin or watery), as in sauces versus broths. Madigo is masabaw or watery or full of broth, and alabaw or labaw-labaw means has excessive broth or sumobra sa sabaw. The onomatopoeic man-gagnet indicates a cartilaginous consistency: crunchy but with pleasant chewy resistance.

The variety of terms for slippery is quite high: andanglel (as in okra and saluyot), anggales (as in bad cassava when cooked), malamuyak (from lamuyak, alga; as in vegetable salad that is no longer crisp), malamuteg (mucilaginous texture as in immature coconut meat). Malamoy is used in particular when the broth is slimy.

When describing fruits, atoyak is used to mean nalamog or squashed. Nankakamolsit is like the plural of atoyak-toyak. Abeyew (hinog sa pilit) is not exactly a textural term but is used to describe a fruit that got prematurely ripe, so it is no longer crunchy as desired but at the same time not at the mellow stage of ripeness as well.

Makanot means fibrous, as in the case of fibrous fruits and root crops. Aluney or alune-luney is a term to describe meat that is so soft its fibers fall apart, like in pulled pork. Malaberler refers to the texture of rice when not yet fully cooked; the state of rice being undercooked is called abelbel or naeta. Other related terms are ginmalor (toasted and stuck at the bottom of the pot or pan), inmaltey (turned liver-like in hardness), etc. Makakilem means nakakangilo or makes the edges of one's teeth feel uncomfortable or mildly painful, like when chewing on crushed ice.

Other terms pertain to how the throat perceives food and other things it comes in contact with: makapaet (can make you thirsty), mapayket (nanlalagkit or annoyingly sticky), makatikel (can choke you), makapaukok or makaparok (can make you cough).

The diversity is consistent with that of the rest of the country. In the Tagalog region, for example, they have the word basa for wet, mamasa-masa for slightly wet, and hilatsa for surface composure. Hinga refers to "the state of labanos (white radish) after a day or two, when the flesh becomes opaque instead of translucent, its crunch moves to a soft, crumbly stage, and its wetness is no longer uniform but spotty." Hipo is surface texture, lambot is softness. Lo-ok means "watery and crumbly, like the inmost core of watermelon," while lo-oy "refers to the degree past crunchiness of cooked kangkong leaves and stems." Lusaw means dissolved, mabuhangin is sandy, madulas is lubricious or slippery on the tongue, magalas is a bit rough, magalasgas is a particular kind of roughness, maganit must be a particular kind of resistance, magaspang means rough or coarse, makunat is tough or tensile, malabnaw means thin due to excessive water content -- the opposite of malapot, or thickly viscous. Malabo means on the cottony side than crunchy, as in an old apple or overcooked squash. Malabsa is too malata or overly (that is unpleasantly) soft, as in rice that's too soft because of extra water mistakenly added. Malagkit is sticky and gummy, malambot is soft. Malambot na buhaghag is "the precious softness of crab meat," i.e., the fibers falling off each other nicely. Maligat is slightly crunchy or has a uniquely delicate resistance to the bite, as in good squash or fresh squid. Malutong is crunchy, matigas is hard, panat is a place between basa and tuyo, pino is fine, tuyo is dry. Lastly, ugat is the texture of the reddish fish flesh "as the teeth bite into the core and the tongue caresses its sweet secrets in slow rhythms."

There are words -- and thus concepts -- that are peculiar to specific cultures, but the Pangasinan language in the culinary arts is no doubt strikingly rich, indicating an equally rich, because diverse and varied, local cuisine.

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Soups and Congee

The use of unripe saba banana is a quaint feature of local cooking. Out of this, kinurkor a ponti is made, a soupy vegetable dish made of spoon-grated near-ripe saba topped with malunggay or ampalaya leaves and, optionally, fried or grilled fish (bangus or tilapia).

Binolbol with fried tokwa and other fried toppings is plain lugaw or congee (bolbol in Pangasinan means boil), but locals are especially fond of it that stalls make brisk sales out of it. It comes with a choice of seasonings and condiments: patis (fish sauce), calamansi, sili, ground paminta (pepper).

Suwam -- corn soup with palya (ampalaya), marunggay (malunggay), or sili leaves -- is also a distinctive preference here.

Salads

Utong na kamote salad is camote tops with raw tomatoes and lasuna (shallot) in kalamonding (calamansi) and bagoong agamang (shrimp bagoong) or bagoong monamon (anchovy bagoong).

Inkelnat a katuray with kamatis and agamang is blanched caturay flower salad with fresh tomatoes drizzled with sauteed bagoong alamang.

Sliced raw tomatoes (seasoned with a little salt or bagoong of any kind) with sliced boiled egg is also a most common salad or even as breakfast item.

Putot, or young onion leaves that were weeded out in onion farms to create proper spacing in onion beds, may be used in salads consisting of tomatoes or green mango and shrimp paste, in place of sliced onion bulbs. Putot may also be used as the main salad ingredient itself -- just squish a bunch of it in some salt.

A mixture of diced green mango, tomatoes and onions in patis or toyo (soy sauce) is a salad that doubles as dip for fried or grilled fish or meat. 

A local salad makes use of orormot (flowers of the freshwater weed ballaiba), tomatoes, and lasuna in salt or bagoong.

Other traditional salads use a variety of seaweeds, the most popular of which is the ar-arusip (Caulerpa). 

Pipino salad is a simple salad of cucumber sliced round and dressed with vinegar, salt, sugar, and ground pepper. Another cucumber salad uses macaroni and cream.

A local version of ambrosia salad mixes pink or red pomelo with lacatan banana, raisins, toasted nuts, condensed milk, and cream.

Chicken-macaroni salad is a regular on the Christmas table spread.

Jumping salad is a side dish of live river shrimps in calamansi juice or cane vinegar.


Noodles and Pasta Dishes

Locals seem to have not invented anything peculiar because the noodles most preferred here are also the regulation noodles in the rest of the country: pancit bihon, pancit miki, pancit miki-bihon, pancit mami, pancit sotanghon, pancit palabok, and miswa soup (often with patola and ground pork or sardines).

The same goes for pasta dishes: Filipino-style sopas (macaroni soup) and spaghetti have acquired traditional status.

Except for miswa and sopas, pancit dishes and spaghetti are typically prepared during birthday celebrations to signify the wish for long life. They are often prepared side by side, sometimes with pancit palabok as well.

Vegetable Dishes

Pakbet or pinakbet (literally meaning shriveled, originally from the word pinakebet) is, of course, a comfort food, but the round light green talon (the balbalosa eggplant variety) and the little roundish and extra-bitter palya (the Bonito ampalaya variety) are the varieties much preferred to be used in these parts.

Bulanglang here is what Tagalogs mistakenly call pinakbet: sauteed kalabasa (squash), okra, ampalaya, eggplant, and agayep (sitaw or string bean) -- sometimes including gabey (also called parlang) or winged bean, lakamas (singkamas) beans, baktaw (bataw or hyacinth beans), or even bungay marunggay (malunggay fruit or moringa pods) -- with little pork slices as sambong (sahog in Tagalog). It is sometimes cooked in gata (coconut milk) with dilis (dried anchovies).

Utong na agayep (stringbean shoots) is topped on vegetable dishes. The shoots have a delicate nutty flavor and a pleasantly rough texture -- a treat one won't find in other vegetable shoots -- it's a wonder why it is not as well-known in the rest of the country. Coming close to local preference is the use of utong na kalabasa or squash shoots. Utong na gabey (winged bean) is also being eaten.

Saluyot tan labong a sinagsagan is saluyot and bamboo shoots that are boiled and seasoned with bagoong and ginger. (Sinagsagan means seasoned with the "funky-smelling" (as outsiders put it) fish bagoong, but with the bones strained.)  Saluyot may also be boiled in a peres (local word for souring agent, pronounced as /pə-rəs'/) of calamansi, salomagi (sampaloc), vinegar, kamias, or santol, and this cooking style gets rid of the slime of saluyot.

The use of bunga'y marunggay or malunggay pods in vegetable dishes is another defining element of the local cuisine, a turnoff to outsiders due to its strong pharmaceutical taste. Oftentimes, they are topped on pinakbet and bulanglang. Sometimes, malunggay pods are cooked as the main ingredient itself, usually as buridibud, i.e., with camote then topped with fried bangus or pork.

Ingisan papait is a prized delicacy to those who have grown fond of this often extremely bitter dish. It is sauteed sekan in lots of tomatoes then usually flavored with bagoong alamang. It is also cooked with canned sardines or fatty pork bits.

Ingisan kamatis and ingisan kamatis with egg attests to the presence of tomato farms among other vegetable farms here. The cuatro cantos variety of tomatoes is much preferred here.

In our version of ginisan balatong (guinisang munggo), ginger is added -- a turn-off to outsiders, but for some reason, a necessity to locals. White beans and black beans are also regular fare, sauteed in onion and tomatoes then stewed with pork then topped with ampalaya leaves.

Ginisan apayas with utong na kamote tan priton bangus is boiled green papaya with camote tops that is sinagsagan then topped with fried milkfish. It may look deceptively bland but is definitely tasty while being healthy. Green papaya is also cooked in coconut milk but often in combination with kamansi and dilis or tinapa flakes. Green papaya may also be cooked together with mushroom, malunggay leaves, and pork or grilled bangus.

The use of other edible flowers such as burak (squash flowers) and baeg (alukon in Ilokano, himbabao in Tagalog, or Broussonetia luzonica, a local tree species) is another highlight of local cuisine. When in season, the sabsabirukong or sabirukong vine flower (bagbagkong in Ilokano) is often topped on ginisan balatong or other vegetable dishes. (Its pods, often called bagbagkong, are also reportedly eaten.) Old-timers say even the kukuwatit (kakawati) flowers used to be eaten here. The flowers of patola are also considered edible and reportedly have a delightful flavor.

Inpising or pising ya inangel is assorted lowland vegetables boiled in ginger and salt, like the inabraw, dinengdeng, and dinoydoy of Ilocanos or the laswa or law-uy of Ilonggos and Cebuanos. It is often topped with grilled fish such as inkalot a bangus. The use of a short variety of sitaw, called agayep a tandereg (perhaps meaning stiff or standing up; tudo in Ilocano, meaning nakaturo or pointing), cooked this way is another interesting dish, as the sitaw variety gives a subtle difference in flavor. The simple and soupy vegetable dish may be sinagsagan.

Ginataan ya kamansi or langka or ginisa tan sinabawan ya kamansi or langka also makes a significant frequency of appearance in turo-turos and dining tables. Kamansi may be paired with green papaya. 

Being an onion-producing town, a quaint dish is adobon sibuyas, or sliced or whole onions cooked adobo style. Shallots are also often made in pickles, and putot is added into scrambled eggs.

There used to be two varieties of patola being used: a smooth-skinned fragrant variety and the biliran or ridged variety (bilidan in Ilocano).

Kangkong is commonly used as adobo or part of sinigang. Patani (lima beans) is often added in pakbet, making it pointedly fragrant. Talinum (talilong) and kilitis (kulitis, amaranth) are also traditional leafy vegetables; talinum shoots are topped in monggo guisado and sinigang, while kilitis is used in bulanglang and dinengdeng and as salad together with tomatoes and onions in bagoong.

Meat Dishes

Locals cook all of the meat dishes that are popular with the rest of Filipinos, from the traditional Sunday fare (chicken or pork adobo, tinolang manok, sinigang na baboy, etc.) to fiesta fare (menudo, higado, caldereta, afritada, mechado, embotido, morcon, pinaupong manok, spare ribs, patatim, crispy pata, etc.). But certain dishes have slight differences. The most ubiquitous are the following:

The local dinuguan is called bagisen (or baguisen), as in the rest of Pangasinan. Here, it uses kamias as souring agent. The intestines are washed with detergent then boiled in guava leaves to get rid of the fetid smell of intestines. Other preferred cleaning agents include vinegar, salt, banana leaves, and arina (wheat flour). According to Jocelyn Santos Espejo, in their barangay, Inirangan, they include upo slices in their baguisen.

Lauya (nilagang baka or nilagang pata ng baboy) has a thin broth, unlike the rich broth of pochero. It is eaten with rice, of course, but the secret to enjoying this dish fully is this indispensable seasoning on the side: patis with kalamansi.

Beef may be boiled with tender monggo pods (agor), young monggo sprouts (impabasik), and kaldis (kadyos, pigeonpeas), then flavored with bagoong.

During fiestas, the fatty part of pork (taba-taba) is cooked adobo-style in pineapple and is simply referred to as taba-taba. Also ever present is lechon kawali, huge chunks of fatty pork made crisp in its own rendered fat.

A special version of igado (higado) looks pale because, apart from soy sauce, pineapple juice, vinegar, liver spread and other seasonings (Sprite or sugar, oyster sauce, ground pepper), it contains evaporated milk and a little cheese. Another version is on the sweet side because it includes chopped pickles.

Other favorites are pork binagoongan and goat meat dishes: caldereta, pinapaitan a kanding, sinigang sa sampalok, kinilaw (kilawin), and kappukan (raw meat salad). Certain folk love to eat dog meat by cooking azucena or dog meat adobo, which has a distinct taste.

Before 'broiler' chicken became commercially available, the norm was to consume free-range or native chicken, which has a more pronounced chicken flavor. Locals also prize the black chicken variety called ulikba, which is "mas mananam" (has a superior umami taste).


Fish, Shellfish, and Seafood Dishes

Malangsi or freshwater fish produce is king in Bayambang cuisine, thanks to the late lamented legacy of Mangabul Lake at the southern part of town. That is why the town has an official festival named after it, the annual "Malangsi Fish-tival," one of the highlights of the town fiesta. (Malangsi has another, negative meaning: fishy or funky. Interestingly, the local word for ulam or the day's viand is sira, which literally means fish, even though the day's viand is meat.

To outsiders, especially in Pangasinan, the town is synonymous to the fish buro. It is salt-cured tilapia, dalag (mudfish), or gourami with steamed rice and bamboo shoots. Buro is typically sauteed with a generous amount of garlic, onions, and tomatoes in a liberal amount of cooking oil until the edges turn crunchy. The more daring ones like to have ginataang buro with sili, or buro cooked in coconut milk and bird chilis up until the curdling point.

Inselar a karpa or karpeta is carp or little carp sinigang, while inselar a pantat is catfish sinigang. The fish slime is removed by thoroughly rubbing salt or wood ash on the skin of the fish.

These freshwater fishes are cooked in novel ways, as in potseron dalag, or mudfish cooked pochero style and whatever style to suit the individual's taste: curry, kare-kare, patatim, sweet and sour, lumpiang shanghai, and so on. Note that dalag here is also called gele-gele if it is arm-sized and tamus if it is small and immature.

Inselar a sira (like tilapia) may be cooked using sliced unripe pontin seba (saba) and pias (kamias), and the result is interestingly acrid. Other souring agents frequently used include guava and santol fruits, tamarind shoots, and unripe mango. And not to be forgotten is the use of balangbang (culibangbang, alibangbang) shoots as well, the tree from which the town derived its very name, or so according to local lore.

Other species traditionally consumed here are alalo, ayungin, and bunor -- all cooked in different ways: paksiw, selar (pangat), inkalot, etc. Inkabitse (local term for escabeche) is a common style of cooking any of these fish, resembling Chinese sweet-and-sour: cooking the pre-fried fish in lots of sauteed tomatoes, onions, ginger, and garlic, often with leeks, with soy sauce added, so it is on the sour-and-salty side.    

Bayambang is, of course, the home of the world's longest barbecue. The people are so fond of ingkalot a sira or grilled fish. It is typically done in the simplest style: hito, tilapia, or Bonuan bangus is grilled with chopped tomatoes, onions and spices stuffed in the fish belly. It is best dipped in kabelew with inasin (anchovy bagoong) or padas.

Ginataan a alireg is a local species of small snail cooked in coconut milk. When the larger bisukol (kuhol) arrived, cooking it in a broth with sauteed onion, garlic, and ginger and/or coconut milk also quickly became popular. These snails are also simply boiled in ginger and salt (inagatan).

A slipper-sized freshwater clam called beldat is often cooked as adobo.

Another traditional favorite is ginataan a larangan, though the black cone snails are most likely sourced from neighboring towns with unpolluted rivulets.

Sauteed dakumo (talangka) from ricefields is also a native delicacy.

The use of kuros (sun-dried tiny marine shrimp) and bukto (sun-dried small river shrimps), apart from the unshelled and sundried hibe, is another feature of local cuisine.

Townsfolk also traditionally eat a great variety of saltwater produce or seafoods, Bayambang being near seafood-producing towns. The favorite, unsurprisingly, is bangus or milkfish, but not just any milkfish but the famed Bonuan variety raised in Dagupan City, and it is cooked in dazzlingly different ways, from adobo to daing to prito to kinilaw and relleno. The public market used to be filled with a dazzling variety of seafood on a given day, from galunggong, matambaka, tamban, pingka (espada), malaga, asohos, basasong, dorado, tanigue, dalagang bukid, to seaweeds like ar-arusip, from squid and crabs to snails and clams of different kinds.

Tuyo, particularly of the prime quality we call lapad, dilis (dried anchovies in small or large varieties), and tinapa (smoked galunggong) are common breakfast fare.

Rice Cakes, Sweets, Desserts, and Snacks (Kanen/Kakanen, Palamis, Mirindal)

Kanen or kakanen (kakanin) in Pangasinan literally means rice cake, but it actually refers to other cakes made of base ingredients other than rice. Kakanen makers in Bayambang comprise an industry that makes brisk sales in the public market and in those of other towns, meeting a steady demand for sticky sweet treats all year round.

The bulk of kanen makers are concentrated in Brgys. Ligue, Tococ West, Amanperez, etc. and have been at their craft for generations, their knowledge of making an impressive variety of treats passed on from generation to generation, and ever-ready to innovate as the market dictates.

Native residents are discriminating with their kanen. These should be cooked with the best quality of raw materials and cooked perfectly or they would be met with severe criticism.

Rice-based

Biko type

The rice-based ones include a type of sugarless biko called inangit and the sweetened inkiwal.

Inangit vs Inkiwal

Inangit, also called pigar-pigar, is whole (not ground) sticky rice cooked in coconut milk with a little salt -- no sugar added. It is toasted on both sides by manually flipping it from the wok. The wok is lined with banana leaves to prevent the rice cake from burning and to make the flipping easy. Banana leaves are also placed on top of the rice cake. The steaming hot, crunchy, and fragrant galor (tutong in Tagalog; toasted outer layer) is a much coveted part of this simple dish. Brown sugar may be sprinkled on inangit right before eating it.

Inkiwal, on the other hand, is whole glutinous rice cooked in coconut milk, a little salt, and white or brown sugar. It is stirred and stirred (thus the root word kiwal) in the wok until the perfect consistency is reached. Unlike the inangit, inkiwal is not necessarily toasted. Anise seeds may also be added

Inangit and inkiwal are often used as ritual food, offered at the family altar as "atang" (ritual offering) for the dead. Eating the atang is forbidden, or one falls ill of dementia or gets one’s mouth piwis or twisted on one side, or so it is believed.

Patupat or inkaldit is another biko-type of rice cake. It is wrapped in a pyramidal pouch made of a woven coconut leaves. It is cooked in sugarcane juice. The use of coconut leaves and the cooking process both give a different flavor and texture to this rice cake.

Latik generally means coconut-milk-and-mollases reduction, but in Bayambang and other parts of Pangasinan, it means biko topped generously with caramelized sugarcane and coconut milk reduction. This is often called bibingka in other parts of the country, but never referred to like that here, for bibingka means something else.

Latik is a town favorite to this day because of its smoky and toasted banana leaf-tinged flavor. Cooking it with the perfect kulnet (that pleasing chewy quality of rice cakes) requires the best ingredients and a mastery of the process. Locals who make latik make the best latik ever, but they are now quite hard to find.

Pinipig or inuguban is toasted young rice grains then pounded and formed as candy or used as topping for halo-halo.

Binuburan is an unadorned sweet fermented rice treat. It should be eaten first thing in the morning, it is said, to ward off stomachache. Dr. Clarita Jimenez claims that binuburan was first made in Bayambang.

Champorado is rice chocolate porridge topped with a dash of evaporated milk.

Lilot balatong is sweet rice porridge with cracked and toasted mongo beans, preferably served hot.

Ginataan ya mais (ginataang mais) is glutinous rice porridge with coconut milk and some sweet corn, typically served hot. It may contain little jackfruit strips and tapioca pearls. It often comes off as a cross between rice cake and porridge.

Rice cakes or treats made from deremen -- toasted immature sticky rice that are pounded in some wood charcoal -- are traditionally produced only in October in time for All Saints' Day (November 1) and All Souls' Day (November 2). Deremen is typically cooked in at least two ways: inlubi and deremen ya ginataan.

Inlubi is rice cake made of deremen traditionally prepared to mark Pista'y Inatey (Undas), reportedly as an offering to one's dearly departed. Today, inlubi is often for sale even when it's not yet November. It is aptly described as having a "toasty" taste and "smelling like fresh morning air."

Ginataan ya deremen is a sweet, cold, soupy dessert made of raw deremen steeped in boiling water, fresh coconut milk, strips of young coconut meat, and sugar until the rice grains become soft and get cooked. It is served cold.

Latik a deremen is inlubi topped with latik or panutsa-sweetened coconut milk reduction.

Gipang is essentially candied puffed pinipig or toasted rice crispies. It is said to be a local specialty that originated in Brgy. Amanperez. It is a hybrid between puff/pop rice, pinipig, and deremen, the result a wonderful combination of flavors and consistency: chewy and crunchy at the same time, and smoky and sweet too.

Gipang is made from deremen, fried in oil and molten sinakob (sugar molasses discs), and then shaped into blocks. Like pinipig but not flattened into flakes, this greenish-gray crunchy sweet treat is often used as topping in halo-halo or eaten as is.

Use of tapong or ground rice

Rice cakes using tapong or ground rice come in many varieties. There is the unday-unday (palitaw), bicho-bicho or bitso-bitso (carioca), buchi or butsi, tikoy, and the kulambo.

Unday-unday is the local term for palitaw, white tongues of boiled galapong topped with grated coconut and white sugar sprinkled with toasted sesame seeds.

Bicho-bicho or bitso-bitso (carioca in Tagalog) is sticky rice balls with young coconut strips and rolled in white or brown sugar then fried and pierced in a small bamboo stick.

Butsi or buchi is deep-fried sweet rice cake made into brown flattened balls filled with a sweet monggo paste then rolled in sesame seeds.

Tikoy is known as sticky Chinese rice cake often given away as gift for the Chinese New Year and often comes in various flavors, but in this town, it comes in a brown version (using brown sugar) with the top part made tough through frying. (In neighboring San Carlos City, tikoy is also called pininat.)

Kulambo is white glutinous rice dessert with a lot more gooey consistency compared to tikoy.

Puto is a popular steamed ground rice cake delicacy that is commonly made in the different parts of the Philippines, so it comes in a host of varieties. Malays are also known to make this delicacy, which they call putu.

There is the typical cupcake-shaped puto with a bit of cheese on top that is commonly served in birthday parties and other feasts.

Puton belas or puto lanson is fluffy white puto sold the size of a bilao (bamboo winnowing tray) and then sliced into pieces in rhomboidal shape. It may or may not contain anise seeds or may or may not be slathered with a little margarine and drizzled with freshly grated coconut. (Lasong refers to the large pan-type earthenware it is cooked in.)

Another puton belas version is bibingkan tapong or simply tapong, which is made of ground non-glutinous rice that is toasted on the top, making it a cross between puto and bibingka but without using much of a riser. Essentially a rice bread, its smoky bland taste is its own appeal.

Puto Calasiao is small white puto variety made in Calasiao which is particularly sought-after for its petite size and chewiness. Since Calasiao is near Bayambang, this type of bite-size puto is everyday fare in town, a sweet and delicious snack eaten as is or as accompaniment to savory dishes such as dinuguan or pancit and other common Filipino dishes. Often referred to as "white gold" with a sliver of cheese on top, it is sticky, soft, and moist in consistency at the same time. The secret to achieving this particular consistency lies in the use of the Maharlika or Corazon rice variety.

Today, puto Calasiao comes in plain, ube, pandan, strawberry, and mango flavors.

Kutsinta, cuchinta, or puto kutsinta is round reddish-brown "unleavened cake textured like a stiff and chewy pudding, and is prepared from wet-milled rice flour with sugar and lye, the lye giving a stiff, chewy texture." It is topped with fresh grated coconut and comes in bite size like Calasiao puto.

A purple, red, and brown unleavened version of rice cake is also called puto. Both are often sold by ambulant vendors together with the usual puto and kutsinta. Food color is apparently used in these varieties, and these are topped with freshly grated coconut.

Bibingka is grilled rice pancake that may or may not contain coconut strips inside. It is cooked in a clay stove using a pan that is topped with a tin plate containing hot embers. The cake is covered with banana leaf, which imparts aroma to the toasted cake. Often topped with butter and freshly grated coconut, it is traditionally sold only during the Christmas season, particularly after the ‘Simbang Gabi’ or dawn masses.

Suman is glutinous rice, either whole grains or as flour, cooked in coconut milk and wrapped in banana or coconut leaves. It mostly comes as suman sa lihiya (Tagalog term) wrapped either conically in young banana leaf wrap in the conical balisongsong style or in coiled young coconut leaves. Suman sa lihiya is dipped in granulated sugar and often eaten while sipping coffee.

Tupig is a kind of suman in which wet sticky rice flour with strips of young coconut meat and sugar is steamed as a small flat strip, rolled in banana leaf, then grilled over embers, giving off an addictive smoky-banana leafy aroma.

We have three terms for bilo-bilo -- ginataan, tambo-tambong, or kineler -- is a soupy dessert of diced taro (yam) or camote (sweet potato) and saba, globules of galapong (rice dough), and sago and/or tapioca pearls cooked in coconut milk and sugar. Jackfruit strips are sometimes added. The use of diced ube gives it a purple color. A simple version of tambo-tambong is all white: galapong, sago, and sometimes strips of soft coconut meat.

Masikoy is a version of palitaw swimming in sweet coconut sauce with a generous amount of pulverized toasted sesame seeds.

It may not be traditional fare, but sapin-sapin has been sold for years in bulk order by Lydia Calicdan of Brgy. Amanperez.

Corn-based

The corn-based ones include the jiggly tibok-tibok (made of cornstarch and carabao's milk then topped with coconut milk curds) and corn polvoron.

Tibok-tibok is a thin, silky version of maja blanca which resembles the consistency of jello. Also known as carabao's milk pudding, its name comes from the Kapampangan word for heartbeat, referring to how the pudding starts to bubble and heave as a signal of doneness.

Corn polvoron is a local shortbread that uses toasted coarse corn flour in place of fine wheat flour, together with butter, powdered milk, and sugar.

Mais con hielo is sweet corn bits in shredded ice and sweetened milk.

Traditional non-sweet corn treats include binatog, boiled corn kernels drizzled with salt and grated coconut; corn puffs; cornick; inkalot a mais or grilled white corn (Silangan variety, glutinous and non-glutinous, with a unique flavor); etc.

Cassava-based

Cassava is called kamoten kahoy or kahoy for short, and it is prepared in different ways.

Inlambong a kahoy is blocks of cassava simply boiled in water or in coconut milk with a little salt and then dipped in sugar or katiba. It may also be eaten hot with margarine or butter, then sprinkled white or brown sugar and grated coconut.

Cassava fritters are made from grated cassava that are formed into patties then deep-fried.

Kundandit (also called dinekdek) is boiled then pounded kamoteng kahoy (cassava) mixed with toasted finely ground corn and brown sugar.

Nilupak is cassava that is boiled and then pounded with shredded coconut and white sugar. Boiled unripe (gubal or manibalang in Tagalog) saba may be added in, pounded together into the mix.

According to Iluminada J. Mabanglo, topping both cakes with a dab of margarine is a recent modification.

Notably, Manaoag's version of kundandit described elsewhere appears to be different. Today, Bayambang's versions of commercial kundandit and nilupak are also dusted with white sugar and toasted and crushed sesame seeds.

At home, people made cassava cake that is a lot finer in quality compared to its commercial version.

Ambulant peddlers used to sell cassava pudding, which is a fat stick of pudding wrapped in transparent plastic wrapper.

Suman a kahoy or pinais is suman made of steamed finely ground cassava wrapped in banana leaf. A variant is called kutitem, which is described online as "rice cake made with cassava or sticky rice flour wrapped in banana leaves, perhaps with sugar but without salt."

Kinuskos a kahoy is cassava that is grated instead of pounded and mixed with young coconut strips and sugar, then steamed, so it has a rough, stringy consistency.

Versions of pichi-pichi (translucent cassava balls rolled in grated coconut) are sold in the public market. There are bite-size pieces that are less translucent than the usual pichi-pichi. There is a version formed into a floral shape.

Latik ya kahoy (or latik a kahoy) is cassava cake in sugarcane syrup-and-coconut reduction. It is cooked like a bibingka, i.e., grilled with glowing charcoals placed on top of a tin pan, thus explaining the epidermal caramelization, so it may be called bibingkang (kamoteng) kahoy as well. It is delicious and soft, almost like cassava pudding, which is presumably oven-baked, but a tad harder than cassava cake, which is steamed.

Sugarcane-based

The sugarcane-based ones included sinakob (with or without peanuts) and the ultra-sweet and super-viscous pulitipot. But there used to be a tradition here of panagpangos or panag-us-os or biting off sugarcane bits per se from a foot-long cane and chewing it to extract the raw juice and spitting out what remains of the pulp.

Sinakob (panocha or panutsa in Tagalog) is solidified (and thus brown-colored) sugarcane molasses.

Pulitipot is a very sweet and viscous form of unrefined sugar that easily solidifies into glass-like consistency when heated.

Coconut-based

Katiba is the local name for coco jam, coconut extract cooked in molasses.

Coconut candy is candied coconut extract, a solidified version of katiba. When sold in stores, it is wrapped in rolled white bond paper.

Ginuyor, according to professor Perfecto Beltran, was “a variety of coconut candy in the olden days. It was yellowish in color because it had butter, was much longer and bigger than the ordinary coconut candy, also wrapped in paper but twisted like a rope and the outer part was flaky. One had to pull one end from the other to get a piece -- thus 'ginuyor' or pulled."

When oil is extracted from coconut, all that is left is the reduction called ganusal, and this is used as topping or garnishing for the different kakanen.

Bocayo or bukayo is candied coconut meat strips, which comes in two varieties, one using brown sugar and another using white sugar, and shaped into a bit moist and oily balls or blocks with a chewy consistency. Bocarillo is its flat, drier, harder candy version that also comes in both varieties, with crunchy but gummy consistency.

Others

Pakasyat is like the panutsa or muscovado from the silag or buri palm tree but quite different. It could easily be mistaken for a smallish tablea. Its sweetness is blunted by a bitter edge. Pakasyat is even made more interesting by its delicate melt-in-your-mouth quality.

The sweet sap of silag is drunk as sinamit.

Halo-halo is the ever-present summer treat of mixed sweets in shredded ice, evaporated milk and white sugar -- the more ingredients, the better: sago pearls or tapioca pearls, nata de coco, red, white, and green kaong, cubes of camote and saba preserve, sweet red monggo beans or red and white kidney beans, garbanzos, langka strips, macapuno (coconut variety with thicker, softer meat) strips, with pinipig or gipang, leche flan, and ube jam as toppings. Other options include melon strips and avocado.

Guinomis is a sweet, cold, and refreshing drink that’s made of gulaman cubes (agar jelly), sago pearls, and pinipig in coconut milk, syrup, evaporated milk, and crushed ice. There are many variations of guinomis – vanilla, pandan leaves for flavor, and melon strips may also be used. A current reincarnation of this treat is the omnipresent buko pandan, pandan-flavored gelatin cubes and buko strips in sweetened heavy cream.

Gulaman from red agar is a most common jelly dessert. This is also made into iced drinks with plain gulaman or as sago’t gulaman (gulaman with sago pearls).

Halaya is, of course, ube haleya or ube jam.

Leche flan is Filipino-style egg custard, a favorite during fiesta and other special occasions.

Simple boiled snacks (inlambong, with only a dash of salt) are much preferred among local households as daily fare: apuler, tuge, sago, mani, mais, saba, kahoy or kamoteng kahoy, bukel na langka (jackfruit seeds). Sago and apuler have become particularly missing from the scene for decades.

Among stands in the market, the most indispensable items are fried or adobo peanuts, banana cue, balut, itlog pugo, and chicharong baboy. Sold in a typical garita (sari-sari store) are kulangot (belekoy in Tagalog).

Lakamas (singkamas, turnip) take up the runners-up spot in the hearts of local snackers.

Today, a purple-speckled corn is currently the preferred variety when it comes to boiled corn on the cob. It used to be an unheard variety.

Certain fruits other than coconut are favored as sweets or preserves. Langka preserves and kundol candy are two of the most well-known. Overripe salomagi (tamarind), locally kalangakang, is shaped into sugary balls called tamarindo.

Pastillas are also often consumed, in plain, macapuno, ube, and langka flavors. So are macapuno balls.

Some folk ate ice cream in halved monay bread as early as the late 1970s.

Fairly new arrivals on the scene (from 1980s onward) include potato-onion twist, a soft, crunchy, and addicting onion-infused potato crackers, and rice crackers, which look like fish crackers, but actually contain only rice, cassava starch, and seasonings, invented by former fish cracker factory workers who hailed from Brgy. Sancagulis. Somebody around town also sells a maruya made of buko strips.

Juices and Coolers

Fresh buri sap is traditionally drunk as 'juice' called sinamit.

Cold buko 'juice' (coco 'water') with buko strips, melon juice with melon strips, and drinks with gulaman (agar jellos) are the most common coolers collectively referred to as palamig.

Ice scramble or iskrambol also used to be a mainstay of sidewalk stalls, and it was made of various fruit flavors.

Green mango juice and mango juice and shake are, of course, popular as well, as well as calamonding (calamansi) juice.

Other native juices used salomagi (tamarind) and piyas (kamias). Papaya ‘shake’ and avocado ‘shake,’ both with whole fruit slices, are also a local favorite.

Fruits

A preferred item to round out a typical meal is a slice of sweet ripe mango, typically the kalabaw or pico variety. Green to yellowish Indian mango and apple mango come second, but as snacks, not dessert. Green Indian mango is often slathered with sauteed agamang (bagoong alamang).

The next favorite would be lacatan and latundan bananas. Alternative banana varieties include the very common though seasonal ebeb (green, sourish one), seba (saba or Cardaba), and morado (purple banana). A little wild green banana is called balayang. It is filled with seeds but the flesh is considered tastier than the common tundal.

A great variety of fruits is consumed besides the above. When they are in season, particularly in the month of May, sarguelas (siniguelas) and lomboy (duhat) are snapped up, the lomboy shaken in salt. Papaya, melon (before the invasion of the cantaloupe varieties, there was the oblong variety), langka, avocado, caimito, camachile, chico, guyabano, atis, lukban (white and red pomelos), and chesa appear regularly in the market. Among the lesser-known ones (and maybe vanishing) are the indigenous species of makopa, kasuy, rattan, caramay, granada (pomegranate), anonas, and mabolo. 

In the old days, American imports such as apple (fragrant Washington apples, Chinese red apple, and sour green apple), mandarin orange, navel orange, purple grapes, and pear strictly appear only during the Christmas season. There was no Fuji apple yet.

Condiments, Relishes, Appetizers

If not the main dish, buro may be also used as side dish or a relish. It goes well with fried fish and pork chop, steamed vegetables, and even pakbet, but one has to acquire the taste in the first place.

Mulantong is a variant of buro using smaller freshwater fish: a young gourami variety called siringan, called as such because it has a siring, literally "facial mark."

Buro made of fermented bangus intestines, shrimp, and pork are also traditionally consumed.

Green mango and kamias are also salt-cured as buron mangga and buron pias.

We are very particular with our bagoong. It has to be inasin a monamon or anchovy bagoong from a certain place in Lingayen called Manibo. It is used as a dip with calamansi or, better yet, kabelew as peres (souring agent).

Agamang with kalamansi and patis with calamansi are also very much preferred dips for fried fish.

The use of grated green mango mixed with mackerel sardines is popular because the pairing is perfectly contrapuntal to anyone who acquires the taste.

Spread

Traditionally used as bread filling is coco jam or katiba.

Hot Beverage

Rice 'coffee' with red sugar or with red sugar and milk is a logical result of being a rice-producing town.

Christmas and New Year’s Day Dishes

It is during the Yuletide holiday season that the local dining table is laden with all the random high cuisine items from the local repertoire. Among the more affluent, one can find, aside from imported fruits, a number of the special-occasion dishes in various categories coming together, defining local haute cuisine.  Among the most definitive are hamon, queso de bola, tasty bread, sopas, macaroni salad, and the family recipe of seldom-cooked meat dishes, ranging from mechado to callos and other special putahes (main dishes).


Exotic Dishes

The daring ones among us cook and eat the following items that are most likely Ilokano or Kapampangan influences: patang (frogs), ararawan or dalukdok (mole cricket) and kuryat (cricket) sauteed in their own oil and sliced kamias after removing the wings, heads and innards. The even more daring ones reportedly eat sisimot (winged termites), duron (locust), itnol na asubok (weaver ant eggs), ampingilan embryos (wasp embryos), etc., often by frying.

Frogs (the edible species that thrive in farms) are fried, cooked as adobo, or stewed.

Wild tilay (monitor lizard), uleg (sawa or python), and farm rat may also be cooked as adobo or ginataan.

On a final note, it is interesting how certain indigenous herbs are being mostly shunned by locals, thinking these are inedible weeds, or eaten only as last-resort choices in times of famine: pansit-pansitan (Peperomia pellucida), ngalub (Portulaca oleraceae), sabitan or sabsabitan (Amaranthus spinosus), salsalapi or salapi (tabokol in Ilocano), etc.

Thoroughly unapologetic despite its oftentimes extreme 'fear factor' -- with puzzling lack of desire to impress or convert the outsider -- a 'take it or leave it' attitude, in other words: that's Bayambangueño and Pangasinan-Ilocano cuisine. 

Informants:

Municipal Consultant on Museum, Culture and Arts Gloria de Vera-Valenzuela: ginisan crunchy buro, putseron dalag and other such inventions, ginisan kamatis, ginisan kamatis with egg

Office of the Special Economic Enterprise Gernalyn Santos: present market offerings

Municipal Tourism Officer Rafael Saygo

Mayor's Action Center head Jocelyn Espejo: baguisen

Municipal Media Affairs Officer Dr. Leticia B. Ursua: inkaldit, kundandit

Mildred S. Odon: pising ya inangel

Joseph Anthony Quinto

Melchor Orpilla

Mariza Flor Mata

Clarita F. Tagab

Joey Ferrer

Venus Junio

Raul Ramos

Waldy Ferrer Canalita

Prof. Perfecto Beltran

Iluminada J. Mabanglo

Resty S. Odon

John Quinto

Joseph Anthony F. Quinto

Luz B. Cayabyab

Benjoe R. Agbuya

Ellen B. Solomon

April Grace Paca Estrada Apostol 

Dennis Flores

John Marc Flores

Bayambang National High School culture mappers

Other members of the Bayambang Culture Mapping Facebook page 

Recipes:

 

References:

Buro-making: https://bayambangmunicipalnews.blogspot.com/2019/08/buro-making-bayambang-style.html
Pinakbet: https://bayambangmunicipalnews.blogspot.com/2019/08/feature-how-bayambanguenos-cook-pinakbet.html Inlubi: https://bayambangmunicipalnews.blogspot.com/2019/08/panag-inlubi.html
Gipang: https://bayambangmunicipalnews.blogspot.com/2018/03/crunchy-bricks-you-can-eat.html
Deremen: https://bayambangmunicipalnews.blogspot.com/2019/10/panaggawa-na-deremen.html
 

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