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Philippines: Interesting News, Culture and Personalities thread

William Hung

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So the Philippines and Vietnam has just signed a Strategic Partnership agreement. To celebrate this event, I am opening this thread to learn more about our Filipino friends. As a Viet, I am already intrigued and captivated by this beautiful country and people even though I have a lot more to learn and discover about them. So come join me on this journey to learn more about the Philippines, this thread is for all you non-Filipinos like me who admire the Philippines.

Absolutely no trolls are welcomed in this thread. This is dedicated to all the positive news about the Philippines, its culture industry, personalities or anything interesting that are related to the Philippines.

18 reasons to visit the Philippines - Telegraph

From the telegraph:

The dry season has arrived in the beach-blessed archipelago of the Philippines. Here are 18 more reasons to visit


1. Arguably the cheapest beer in the world


The Philippines has been the home of San Miguel since 1890, with a bottle costing, even now, only about 50p. The Spanish San Miguel was at first an affiliate but it is now an independent brewer. The version drunk everywhere in the Philippines is a fraction of the price of its Spanish namesake and, when chilled by a beach, actually tastes much better.



2. There are 7,107 islands to choose from


In an archipelago of 7,107 islands, ringed by pristine beaches and teeming coral reefs, the main problem with the Philippines is that it can be hard to decide where to lay your towel.Our writer picks his favourite for first-time visitors here.



3. You can play bingo on the plane over


Filipinos have a vivacious sense of humour – as evidenced by Cebu Pacific’s mid-air passenger quizzes and bingo games that will have you chuckling in the aisles and possibly even winning a cuddly toy. The locals' easy-going demeanour helps make visiting a happy experience and lends weight to the tourist board's slogan "It's more fun in the Philippines".

4. It has the world's longest subterranean river


PP Underground River is a 8.2km navigable river, the world's longest underground, running through a cave system before flowing into the South China Sea. A lagoon framed by ancient trees marks the mouth of the cave. It was recently named one of the seven wonders of the natural world.



5. You can eat quirky purple desserts


Ever wanted to douse a bowl of cornflakes in ice? In the Philippines you can, while adding a scoop or two of psychedelic purple yam ice cream. Halo halo is the name of the cold and crunchy dish.

phil-halo_3500397b.jpg
A halo halo ice cream dessert



6. You can cringe at one of the world’s weirdest snack foods


At the other end of the scale is balut - a partially-developed duck embryo that is boiled and eaten in its shell. Try or avoid, it's certainly one of the world's weirdest foods.

rice-green_2260163b.jpg
The terraces are the only form of stone construction from the pre-colonial period



7. Rice terraces to make you swoon


Banaue’s rice terraces are majestic. Rising to nearly 3,000 metres, the Cordillera Central mountains in North Luzon provide a dramatic but tranquil alternative for hikers. Banaue is perhaps the most famous attraction in this area, earning the tiny town a place on UNESCO’s list of World Heritage Sites with its ancient, towering rice terraces that were so impressively sculpted from mud-walls more than 2,000 years ago.

phil-tarsier_3167832b.jpg
Tarsiers do not like being kept as pets



8. Tarsiers are the world’s cutest animal


Nocturnal mammals with rotating heads and bulbous eyes, tarsiers are one of the world’s smallest primates. Many live in Bohol and can be seen in its conservation centre. At less than six inches high, these furry little fellows are shy and endangered.

Philippines: a introductory guide



9. Some of the world's most colourful festivals


If you like riotous costumes, bizarre folklore and dancing in the streets try timing a visit to coincide with a festival like Panagbenga, in Baguio City, or alternatively try Ati-Atihan or Sinulog for religious fervour.



10. The beauty of El Nido


Striking limestone stacks (some shaped like crocodiles, helicopters and dinosaurs) guard tiny golden sand coves here that are best explored on a sailing trip. There are also picturesque lagoons to swim in.

palawan-ss_3083082b.jpg
The karst-studded landscapes make this slither of Asia so striking



11. Some of the world’s best diving


Immerse yourself in the underwater world at Tubbataha Reefs National Park, a Unesco World Heritage site that has a 100-metre perpendicular wall, lagoons and two coral islands, or take a boat to see black coral at the Black Forest dive site off Panglao Island.

phil-coral_3500402b.jpg
A colourful coral garden



12. Karaoke is a national sport


In the Philippines, you can belt out a tune in even the shabbiest of roadside shacks. Just don't expect your voice to compare to the dulcet (and well-practiced) tones of locals.



13. Boxing actually is a national sport


If you love the sport then you'll already know about Manny Pacquiao, who most recently made headlines in a flight with Floyd Mayweather Jnr in Vegas. Where Mayweather is crass though, Pacquiao is class, and a star in his home country where rumours that he may one day run for president are not wholly exaggerated.



14. You can snorkel for your dinner


At these three unique restaurants, set on stilts over the sea, guests arrive by boat and are sent overboard with a snorkel to catch their supper. Underneath are nets and you can choose your fish straight from the water. They’ve got baby scallops and oysters, and they’ll scoop up whatever you want, barbecue it and serve it with coconut vinegar, soy sauce, chilli and ginger. That’s it – you eat it with garlic rice and papaya salad. It’s simple, delicious and unadulterated.

phil-jeepney_3500399b.jpg
Jeepney riding fun



15. Jeepneys will make you never want a taxi again


Colourful jeepneys are one of the world's best forms of public transport. These old US army vehicles left behind after the Second World War have now been individually decorated by their young drivers, covered in crazy slogans and kitsch, flouro religious icons that you are unlikely to find anywhere else. They are also highly sociable - just bang on the side if you want to get off.



16. You can see whale sharks and thresher sharks


Donsol is a reliable place to see whale sharks pass by in season, while threshers can, if you are lucky, be spotted at the bottom of hte sea on a dawn dive from Malapascua island.

whale-shark-feedin_2507096b.jpg
A juvenile whale shark eats "uyap", small shrimps, fed to it by a fisherman on a paddleboat REUTERS/David Loh



17. Churches are made out of coral


With 90 per cent of the population Christian, the Philippines is South-east Asia with a difference. Rather than the region's characteristic Buddhist temples and monks, here you will see coral-stone churches and incense-waving priests.



18. You can spend Christmas Day on the beach


Filipinos celebrate Christmas with aplomb.The season's main festivities start on December 16 with nine days of dawn mass leading up to Christmas Day. On Christmas Eve, feasting on suckling pig starts at midnight. New Year is fun too, with beach parties and fireworks in most resorts.

Interesting personalities from the Philippines:

'Filipino Bill Gates': From Cagayan Valley to Silicon Valley | ABS-CBN News

Filipino electrical engineer and venture capitalist Diosdado Banatao is often tagged as the "Filipino Bill Gates."

He starts his day by going on a 4-mile run. He has completed five half-marathons and eight full marathons, including the prestigious New York Marathon.

On Tuesday, the chief executive is set to jog minds all over again as he takes the podium to talk about fostering SMEs via the "Inspiring Story of Innovation and Creation" before APEC delegates.
 
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Mexico, Philippines to promote strong ties | Headlines, News, The Philippine Star | philstar.com

MANILA, Philippines - For several hundred years, the Philippines and Mexico were linked by the Spanish galleon trade between Manila and Acapulco.

During that period, the two countries exchanged agricultural and other products and influenced each other’s culture, with numerous Mexican words becoming incorporated into the Filipino language.

Now Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto is hoping to rekindle and strengthen the historical links.

Nieto arrived yesterday for a state visit and was received by President Aquino at Malacañang, a day ahead of today’s Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation summit.

Nieto landed at the Villamor Air Base in Pasay City early afternoon, and proceeded to Rizal Park in Manila to lay a wreath at the Rizal Monument with Manila Mayor Joseph Estrada.

NBA: Warriors to celebrate Filipino heritage with Philippine themed pre-game shirts - CNN Philippines

Metro Manila (CNN Philippines) — Steph Curry and the rest of the Golden State Warriors are set to celebrate Filipino Heritage Night by donning Philippine themed shooting shirts ahead of their Saturday night (Sunday PHT) game against the Brooklyn Nets.

The Filipino themed pre-game shirts will be the first time that both the Warriors and the league celebrate Filipino heritage in such a way.

Fans will be able to purchase the shooting shirts at the team store at the Oracle Arena or on the official online store.

Even the NBA champ loves the Philippines.
 
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The Jerusalem Post

Filipino boxer Manny Pacquiao visited Jerusalem on Saturday.

Pacquiao toured with his family members The Garden Tomb site near Jerusalem's Old City.

The Garden Tomb is revered by some Christians as the burial site and resurrection of Jesus.

During the tour Pacquiao told Reuters that this is his fourth visit to the region.

"It is my belief to visit here every year, once a year; and it is nice to be here. This is my fourth time," said Pacquiao.

The Filipino boxer is recovering from surgery to repair a torn rotator cuff following his defeat toFloyd Mayweather in May.

Winner of world titles in eight different weight classes, the 36-year-old Pacquiao said in October that he is eyeing one final fight next year before retiring.
 
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What's there to see in my country's culture anyways?

If you want to see Chinese culture, got to China and Taiwan. If you want to see Malay (and Islam) culture, go to Malaysia and Indonesia. If you want Hispanic/Spanish culture, go to Spain or Latin America. If you want to see Western culture, go to USA. If you want to experience Roman Catholicism, go to the Vatican or if you want to see old Churches, go to Macau or Europe.

Nothing to see much in my country's culture, unless you are looking for indigenous culture (or other stuff) that doesn't correspond to any of the bold-red words on top.
 
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...or if you want to see old Churches, go to Macau...

Are you sure? I’ve visited Macau, and went to this tourist attraction spot that supposedly had an old Cathedral. Had to walk up a hill, and it turned out the old “cathedral” was just a piece of wall, literally. What a disappointment.

Anyway:

Maria Ozawa: PH perfect; ‘it’s better here because there’s love’ | Inquirer Entertainment

Maria Ozawa: Philippines’ perfect; ‘it’s better here because there’s love’

How does Maria Ozawa find the Philippines?

“Perfect,” the Japanese actress told the media during a cast party for “Nilalang,” her first movie shot in the Philippines.

“Philippines is so different from Japan. It is better here because you guys have the love. In Japan, work comes before family,” Maria said.

“Work is so important in Japan. You can’t skip anything for work. But here it’s opposite. Family comes first. It’s hard for me to handle that because it’s different from how I have been raised,” she said.

Maria finished taping last month her scenes in the action-thriller film, which also stars Cesar Montano, Meg Imperial and Yam Concepcion.

“Nilalang,” an entry to this year’s Metro Manila Film Festival, tells the story of Tony (Cesar), an NBI agent who investigates a series of r*pes and killings in the metro.

Maria plays the role of Miyuki, daughter of elder Yakuza member Mr. Kazudo. She will team up with Tony and together they will come face-to-face with their true enemy.

Maria said she enjoyed working in the Philippines the most, after also having done movies in Taiwan and Thailand.

“Philippines is way better. Everybody is way too nice. They spoil me,” she said.
 
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Are you sure? I’ve visited Macau, and went to this tourist attraction spot that supposedly had an old Cathedral. Had to walk up a hill, and it turned out the old “cathedral” was just a piece of wall, literally. What a disappointment.

Considering certain people here tend to belittle other people's culture, I decided to post that comment since I rather not share my country's culture with other people.

Besides, there is some half-truth on what I posted above.
 
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Considering certain people here tend to belittle other people's culture, I decided to post that comment since I rather not share my country's culture with other people.

Besides, there is some half-truth on what I posted above.

Are you referring to the Chinese members that insult other people’s culture and religion? They are just feeling insecure and trying to compensate by belittling other culture, that is all.

Maria Ozawa loves the Filippino culture, that’s all that really matters.
 
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Are you referring to the Chinese members that insult other people’s culture and religion? They are just feeling insecure and trying to compensate by belittling other culture, that is all.

Maria Ozawa loves the Filippino culture, that’s all that really matters.

Ya so true they have no culture they destroyed it years ago during the cultural revolution heck even before that since mao took over anyhow enough about them Ozawa is love her because of her adult showbiz career myself included but its nice she found a home here.
 
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What's there to see in my country's culture anyways?

If you want to see Chinese culture, got to China and Taiwan. If you want to see Malay (and Islam) culture, go to Malaysia and Indonesia. If you want Hispanic/Spanish culture, go to Spain or Latin America. If you want to see Western culture, go to USA. If you want to experience Roman Catholicism, go to the Vatican or if you want to see old Churches, go to Macau or Europe.

Nothing to see much in my country's culture, unless you are looking for indigenous culture (or other stuff) that doesn't correspond to any of the bold-red words on top.
We can see a potential trusted friend from PH. As u know, I never say any words that just for pleasing pple from other nations, so u can trust that VN really wanna make friend wt PH.

We may think abt unifying sub Mekong region, we may still dislike CN,JP,US for what they did to VN in the past, but we have No intention to make trouble for PH.

I think PH can buy some weapons, some warship from VN, too, and both will earn mutual benefit from that.:cheers:
 
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Sibug - Sibug festival

sibug-sibug-festival1.jpg


Sibug – Sibug Festival is celebrated during their foundation day on the province of Sibugay on February 26, with colorful Ethnic Street dancing with rituals illustrating good harvest, wedding and healing rituals. During the festival, it endorses it’s number one product which is the oyster or talaba in tagalong which has been known to be the biggest, juiciest, and meatiest oysters in the country. In this two week celebration, in the town of Ipil, “Talaba Longest Grill” has been the main attraction of the visitors and viewers. In this manner, Zamboanga can promote their oystersto the world.

Zamboanga Sibugay recently achieved a world record for the Worlds Longest Talaba Grill with five to 12 inches-long oysters or talaba as the main feature. Because of this, the province of Sibugay earned a title as the Talaba Capital of the Philippines.

Zamboanga Sibugay is a major supplier of oystersfrom the Zamboanga Peninsula to neighboring countries in the Asia Pacific region. It has three major talaba farms in the municipalities of Kabasalan, Siay and Alicia.

A project of Gov. George Hofer, the longest oyster grill aims to make the province known worldwide for its export-quality oysters. Some 15,000 huge pieces of oysters weighing 1,500 kilograms from Barangay Concepcion, Kabasalan were served in the 1.2 kilometer-long grill. More than a thousand participants composed of local government employees, Sibugaynons and visitors joined the event which was part of the two-week-long Sibug-Sibug Festival held in the capital town of Ipil.Zamboanga Sibugay is a major supplier of oystersfrom the Zamboanga Peninsula to neighboring countries in the Asia Pacific region.

It has three major talaba farms in the municipalities of Kabasalan, Siay and Alicia. Hofer said the oyster is one of the major economic boosters of the province. Around 200 families in Barangay Concepcion alone are dependent on the oyster business. Also a much-awaited event was the Sibug-Sibug street dancing competition.

Visitors were also given a glance of the locals culture and traditions through a Western Subanen cultural show. The native Subanens presented their rituals in war, marriage and birth. Subanens are the aborigines of Zamboanga, believed to have developed in theprovince even before the Spanish period.

Zamboanga Sibugay was declared a separateprovince through a Republic Act in 2001. Local officials claimed that the province holds the record of having the lowest crime-rate based on the Philippine National Police (PNP) report for the period 2002-2003. The rubber business is its second income-generating industry next to the export of oysters. It has been recognized for having the oldest rubber plantation in the country.

Sibug-Sibug Festival Zamboanga Sibugay Philippines
 
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Sibug - Sibug festival

sibug-sibug-festival1.jpg


Sibug – Sibug Festival is celebrated during their foundation day on the province of Sibugay on February 26, with colorful Ethnic Street dancing with rituals illustrating good harvest, wedding and healing rituals. During the festival, it endorses it’s number one product which is the oyster or talaba in tagalong which has been known to be the biggest, juiciest, and meatiest oysters in the country. In this two week celebration, in the town of Ipil, “Talaba Longest Grill” has been the main attraction of the visitors and viewers. In this manner, Zamboanga can promote their oystersto the world.

Zamboanga Sibugay recently achieved a world record for the Worlds Longest Talaba Grill with five to 12 inches-long oysters or talaba as the main feature. Because of this, the province of Sibugay earned a title as the Talaba Capital of the Philippines.

Zamboanga Sibugay is a major supplier of oystersfrom the Zamboanga Peninsula to neighboring countries in the Asia Pacific region. It has three major talaba farms in the municipalities of Kabasalan, Siay and Alicia.

A project of Gov. George Hofer, the longest oyster grill aims to make the province known worldwide for its export-quality oysters. Some 15,000 huge pieces of oysters weighing 1,500 kilograms from Barangay Concepcion, Kabasalan were served in the 1.2 kilometer-long grill. More than a thousand participants composed of local government employees, Sibugaynons and visitors joined the event which was part of the two-week-long Sibug-Sibug Festival held in the capital town of Ipil.Zamboanga Sibugay is a major supplier of oystersfrom the Zamboanga Peninsula to neighboring countries in the Asia Pacific region.

It has three major talaba farms in the municipalities of Kabasalan, Siay and Alicia. Hofer said the oyster is one of the major economic boosters of the province. Around 200 families in Barangay Concepcion alone are dependent on the oyster business. Also a much-awaited event was the Sibug-Sibug street dancing competition.

Visitors were also given a glance of the locals culture and traditions through a Western Subanen cultural show. The native Subanens presented their rituals in war, marriage and birth. Subanens are the aborigines of Zamboanga, believed to have developed in theprovince even before the Spanish period.

Zamboanga Sibugay was declared a separateprovince through a Republic Act in 2001. Local officials claimed that the province holds the record of having the lowest crime-rate based on the Philippine National Police (PNP) report for the period 2002-2003. The rubber business is its second income-generating industry next to the export of oysters. It has been recognized for having the oldest rubber plantation in the country.

Sibug-Sibug Festival Zamboanga Sibugay Philippines

Masaya sa Pilipinas Always a festa anywhere
 
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Posting a gist about PH stuff, full details here -> Philippines People Culture Values Tradition and History Yesterday and Today

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What Filipino People Love

Family

We love the concept of family. Proof to this is the fact that most Pinoys even if they no longer live in the country still choose to live together as family in harmony making free calls to the Philippines to chit chat with relatives. Married siblings love to stay in the same house with their parents living together and taking care of one another sharing food, shelter and showing love in everyday living. the young use "po" and "opo" in show of respect which many countries do not have or use as part of their native dialect - it is unique to Pinoys only.

Keeping the family intact as part of Philippines people culture is the fact that it is still being practiced today (which may be a bit feudal in nature) in many provinces and rural areas that only the father (tatay) of the house works outside while mothers (nanay) stay at home taking care of the kids helping them grow in strict Filipino values while doing all the household chores and trying to teach siblings how to do it at the right age.

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Philippines Festival - Colorful Traditional Celebrations in Provinces

Part of what the Philippines people culture got from the Spaniards during Spanish colonial era is the love of celebration of diverse occasion, wedding traditions and fiestas. Since then, Filipinos have chosen to get indebted in loans and borrowing money from rich neighbors just to have something to offer in the dining table for visitors during local fiesta celebration. Whole year through, we celebrate these feasts with bountiful food as a sign of blessings and we dance and sing in karaoke (of today) in streets.

Characterized by local Filipino dishes / food on the dining table, each house without you knowing anybody living in it will try to invite strangers and visitors alike to come eat and try what they have on the table and probably drink a shot glass or two of the local beer - San Miguel Beer or in provinces, the local wine called "lambanog" or "tuba" (naturally fermented coconut flower sap or resin).

Festivals In Philippines (Alphabetical Order):

  • Apribada -- Donsol, Sorsogon -- 4th week of January
  • Arya! Abra Festival -- Abra -- March
  • Ati-atihan Kalibo -- Aklan -- 3rd weekend of January
  • Bayluhay Festival -- San Joaquin, Iloilo -- 3rd Saturday of January
  • Black Nazarene -- Quiapo, Manila -- January 9
  • Biniray - Romblon - January 9
  • Bonok-Bonok Festival -- Surigao -- September
  • Carabao Festival San Isidro, Nueva Ecija; Pulilan, Bulacan; Angono, Rizal May 15
  • Caracol sa Makati -- Makati City, Manila -- last Sunday in January
  • Catandungan Festival Catanduanes October
  • Chinese New Year Chinatowns Late January or early February
  • Cutud Lenten Rites San Fernando, Pampanga April
  • Daro Sinulog - Dumaguete, Negros Oriental - 3rd week of January
  • Dia de Zamboanga Festival Zamboanga City February 26
  • Dinagyang Iloilo City 4th Sunday of January
  • EDSA Day -- Mandaluyong City -- February 25
  • Flores de Mayo Nationwide Month of May
  • Festival of Hearts -- Tanjay City, Negros Oriental -- February 14
  • Grand Cordillera Festival Baguio City November
  • Helubong Festival Lake Sebu, South Cotobato Second week of November
  • Hot Air Balloon -- Clark Subic, Zambales -- February 9-12
  • Ibalong Festival Albay Second week of October
  • International Bamboo Organ Festival Las Piñas Church February 15 to 25
  • Kaamulan Festival Malaybalay, Bukidnon Late February to early March
  • Kadayawan sa Dabaw Festival Davao City 3rd week of August
  • Kagayhaan Festival Cagayan de Oro August 28
  • Kahimonan Abayan Festival Butuan City July
  • Kalilangan Festival -- General Santos City -- 4th week of February
  • Kansilay Festival Silay City, Negros Occidental November 5 - 13
  • Kinabayo Festival Dapitan City July 24
  • Lantern Festival San Fernando, Pampanga December 24
  • Lanzones Festival Camiguin October25-28
  • Lingayen Gulf Landing - January 9
  • Lubli-Lubi Festival Calubia, Leyte August 15
  • Maradjao Karadjao Festival Surigao City September
  • MassKara Festival Bacolod City Third weekend of October
  • Misa de Gallo Nationwide Starts December 16
  • Moriones Festival Boac, Mogpog & Gasal, Marinduque Holy Week
  • Mudpack Festival Murcia, Negros Occidental June 24
  • Our Lady of Candles Festival Jara, Iloilo February 2
  • Pagoda Festival Bocaue, Bulacan July
  • Pahiyas sa Quezon Sariaya, Lucban, Tayabas in Quezon May 15
  • Palo-Palo Festival Batanes August
  • Pamulinawen Festival Laoag City, Ilocos Norte February
  • Parada ng Lechon Balayan, Batangas June 24
  • Peñafrancia Festival Naga City, Camarines Sur 3rd Saturday of September
  • Panagbenga (Baguio Flower Festival) Baguio Flower Festival Late February - Early March
  • Piat Sambali Festival Cagayan Last week of June
  • Pilgrimage on a Caravan La Union, Pangasinan Lenten Month
  • Pintados-Kasadyaan Festival Tacloban, Leyte June 29
  • Pinta Flores Festival San Carlos City 3-5 November 3-5
  • Pinyahan sa Dael Daet, Camarines Norte June 15-24
  • Sagayan Festival Tubod, Lanao del Norte First week of July
  • San Clemente Higantes Festival Angono, Rizal November 23
  • Sandugo Festival Tagbilaran City July 1-2
  • San Fernando, La Union Festival -- La Union -- February 7-10
  • Santacruzan Nationwide Month of May
  • Sarakiki Hadang Festival Calbayog City, Samar September 7
  • Sayaw sa Obando Obando May 17, 18, and 19
  • Shariff Kabunsuan Festival Cotabato City Third week of December
  • Sinukwan Festival San Fernando, Pampanga Early December
  • Sinulog Cebu City, Cebu 3rd Sunday of January
  • Sinulog de Tanjay Festival Tanjay, Negros Oriental July
  • Suman Festival -- Baler, Aurora Quezon Province -- 3rd Week of February
  • Sumbali Festival Bayombong, Nueva Viscaya A Week in August
  • Taong Putik Festival Aliaga, Nueva Ecija June 24
  • Tawo-Tawo Festival -- Bayawan City -- February 17
  • T'boli Tribal Festival Lake Sebu, South Cotobato September
  • Tinagba Festival Iriga City, Camarines Sur February 11
  • Turumba Festival Pakil, Laguna Week before Holy Week
  • Vigan Town Fiesta -- Vigan Ilocos -- January 25
  • Zamboanga La Hermosa Festival Zamboanga City October 1-12
  • Zambulawan Festival Pagadian, Zamboanga del Sur 3rd Sunday of January
 
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What the hell is Filipino food? Here are the 7 dishes you need to know

By Andy Kryza

As the US looks for its new East Asian food obsession, signs are pointing to a boom in Filipino food, a melting pot cuisine that takes elements of Chinese and Malaysian, and mixes in a huge amount of Spanish influence left over from the colonial days.

It's one of the most unique flavor profiles out there, but where do you start? Probably not with the blood stew or chicken embryos (though those are pretty good, according to Andrew Zimmern). To help you enter this brave new world, we've assembled seven entry-level Filipino comfort foods that will have you completely hooked. Mainly because there's fried pork.

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LUMPIA
What it is:
Veggies and sometimes meat, wrapped up in an crepe-like egg-based wrapper
What's the deal: Basically, the Pinoy cousin to the egg roll, spring roll, and salad roll, lumpia is served either crisply fried or "fresh", meaning unfried (also meaning less-delicious). It's filled up with carrots, sprouts, and other veggies, with the option to add shaved chicken, shrimp, pork, or tofu. Often served with peanut sauce, it's one of the culture's favorite appetizers and the perfect gateway food for beginners.


ADOBO
What it is:
Chicken, pork, or seafood simmered in a marinade of vinegar & soy sauce
What's the deal: The unofficial national food of the Philippines, Adobo starts with a protein -- bone-in chicken, pork loin, squid, or fish, usually -- that goes into a pot filled with soy, vinegar, garlic, onions, and other veggies (depending on the recipe). It's then simmered until tender, and kind of pickled in its own stock, before being served over rice. Not to be confused with the bald bad guy from Double Dragon (that'd be Abobo), it's a common foreigner move to order it with extra sauce on the rice... a move that's nonetheless worth it because it's delicious.


PANCIT
What it is:
Noodles
What's the deal: The most popular foundation in street foods and upscale cuisine, pancit refers to a wide variety of noodles that essentially become the Filipino version of Pad Thai. The most common are clear-ish noodles about the width of spaghetti and are often layered, kitchen sink-style, with pork, seafood, tofu, veggies, eggs, and sauce.


MENUDO
What it is:
The global sensation that launched Ricky Martin's career A stew of roasted pork, peppers, and tomato sauce
What's the deal: You can't even get through 10mins ofan Antonio Banderas film without internalizing the Spanish influence, so when your country is the subject of 300yrs of Spanish colonialism, some stuff's gonna stick. Menudo is the Filipino take on a classic Spanish soup, reinvented as a thick stew filled with pork, peppers, tomatoes, and other veggies served over rice and with a side of Desperado.


INASAL
What it is:
Skewered, grilled chicken marinated in lime, peppers, vinegar, and tropical seeds
What's the deal: Another popular street food and cookout staple, Inasal originated in the west coast city of Bacolod, also known as the City of Smiles -- smiles that are filled with chunks of grilled chicken that're first marinated, and then coal-roasted while being basted with that vinegar-y juice. Lucky for that smile, the skewer can easily be used as a toothpick.


KARE-KARE
What it is:
An oxtail stew with a strong peanut flavor
What's the deal: Like most stews (except Patrick Stuart, who is far too refined), Kare-kare is the result of tossing the stuff that didn't cut the mustard in other dishes into a pot. Mainly oxtail, sometimes offal and hooves. Then it's loaded with crushed peanuts or peanut butter, filled with veggies, and served either on its own or over rice.


LECHON KAWALI
What it is:
Fried pork belly
What's the deal: Another legacy from the Spanish colonial days, holidays are celebrated by roasting a whole suckling pig (lechon) over coals. That's pretty complicated for a restaurant. But most will carry lechon kawali, a condensed version that makes bacon look healthy by comparison. It's basically pork belly, skin, and a little meat fried until crisp. Anthony Bourdain declared the stuff in Cebu "the best pig ever". No matter where you get it, each bite will make you wonder why Chinese is your takeout standby.

Andy Kryza is Thrillist's National Eat/Drink Senior Editor, and has proudly lived vegetable-free since 2001.

LINK - >
Filipino food for beginners - Adobo, Lumpia, Pancit



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Coconut, Vinegar, and a Whole Lotta Pork: An Introduction to Filipino Cuisine
Drew Lazor

In restaurant circles, the dreaded F-word—fusion—is usually reserved to describe some sort of disparate multi-culti combination, like sauce soubise on top of tamales. But in the case of Filipino food, there's no stronger term to capture the essence of Asia's most unique, idiosyncratic, and underrated culinary tradition.

To novice eyes, the food of the Philippines, the archipelago of 7,000-plus islands due east of the Malay Peninsula, is weird. Hell, it's weird to me, and I grew up eating it. There's oddity in unfamiliarity, and this is a cuisine that doesn't quite resemble, in elements, execution, or intention, anything else in Southeast Asia.

And that's what makes it so fascinating. No sound bite can accurately answer the one question Filipinos get plenty: What is Filipino food? "The simplest way to put it is our food reflects our history," says Yana Gilbuena, founder of The Salo Project.

It's a history shaped by colonialism. The Spanish, led by Ferdinand Magellan, made landfall on the islands in 1521, and controlled the Philippines until 1898, introducing Iberian ingredients and touches from other colonial holdings, like Mexico, to the natives. Though the two countries are ancient trade partners, the 16th century also saw the first major wave of immigrants from the Chinese coastal provinces of Fujian and Canton, who brought their own specialties across the South China Sea. Then there's America, which took control of the archipelago from Spain following the Treaty of Paris until it officially became an independent republic in 1946.

Unlike neighboring nations like Malaysia, where many immigrants recreate their recipes relatively free of outside influence, the Philippines has seen these immensely different traditions commingle over the centuries, creating a remarkable Euro-Yankee-Latino-Malay amalgam—capital-f Fusion, fo' real—built on big, uncompromising flavors.



Bold Flavors...

Regionality plays a huge role in Filipino cooking, as it's a geographically divisive country populated by dozens of ethnic groups. "Each island has their own flavor," says Gilbuena, who's originally from Iloilo City in the Western Visayas. But there are commonalities that inform the Filipino palate regardless of longitude and latitude.

"Bottom line, it's the boldness," says Nicole Ponseca, owner of Maharlika and Jeepney in New York City's East Village. "It's the audaciousness of the ingredients."

The pillars of the pantry is a good place to begin, as they double as building blocks for the cuisine itself. For starters, you're going to find vinegar—most commonly sukang iloco, derived from sugarcane—in every Filipino kitchen. Used for marinating, braising, and glazing, as well as a table dip for entrées and pulutan (drinking snacks like chicharrón), vinegar is also the backbone of adobo, the Philippines' most lauded dish. (More on this in a sec.)

Vinegar is the most prevalent holdover from the pre-colonial era, a truly indigenous distinction. "The Filipino penchant for lip-puckering zest is not without reason," writes food blogger Marvin Gapultos in The Adobo Road Cookbook. "In the tropical climes of the Philippines, the preservative powers of vinegar were a culinary necessity for centuries, long before refrigeration was available."

Sour notes also crop up in the form of calamansi, the versatile citrus fruit that finds its way into innumerable dishes; sweet and sour tamarind, stirred into soups like sinigang; and green (unripe) mangos, an everyday snack. In fact, those mangos are often topped with another building block: bagoong, or fermented shrimp paste, which, along with patis (fish sauce), speaks to the aggressively salty/funky section of the Pinoy flavor wheel.

Given the environs, bananas, plantains, and coconuts pop up constantly, in myriad forms; banana ketchup is perhaps the most curious to outsiders. White rice is also a must with every meal of the day, starting with silog-style breakfasts—a breakfast meat, like longaniza, accompanied garlic fried rice, fried eggs and sliced tomatoes. In heavily Filipino Daly City, California, the joke goes that it's permanently foggy because all the residents are running their old-school R2D2-looking rice cookers ragged.

Unlike Thai cuisine, with which Filipino is often confused, heat is not a defining characteristic, though it does factor into individual dishes like Bicol Express, a pork and coconut milk stew garnished with sliced long hots.




...Served Family-Style


It's tough to make many more blanket statements about Filipino food, given how much it varies from island to island, city to city and household to household. But this much can be said: Meals are rarely Western in structure. "Filipino, as a basic rule, is ordered family-style," says Ponseca, who encourages guests at Maharlika to approach chef Miguel Trinidad's menu with the fierceness of a tactical strike. "Get in there and get as much as your tummy can handle. These dishes are made to be enjoyed this way." Kamayan-style feasts at Maharlika involve a huge spread of shareable food laid out on banana leaves for diners to eat with their hands.

"We cook food in big batches to make sure everyone's fed," says Prometheus Brown, the Seattle-based rapper and poet who last year launched the "Food & Sh*t" Filipino dinner series with his wife, Chera. "It's not so much an individualized thing, with individual plates and individual portions. It's one big pot."




The Big Three: Gateway Dishes


If you come across one big pot simmering away in a Filipino kitchen and you dare to lift the lid, you've got a puncher's chance of that pot containing adobo. A prominent example of colonial mind-meld—conquistadors used their tongues to talk up local cooking, and it eventually became de facto Tagalog—adobo describes not only a dish, but a cooking technique. To qualify, a meat (chicken or pork, most commonly) must be braised in an elixir of vinegar, bay leaves, garlic, salt, and black pepper.

If that sounds boring to you, you've never had adobo. Something alchemical takes place when these ingredients get together, a universally celebrated innovation that inspires both creation and consternation. Everybody, their mom, her six sisters, and all their kids tout their own, adding in proprietary ingredients they'll swear creates a superior result. The "new-school" inclusion of soy sauce, in particular, is an endless topic of debate, the designated hitter rule of adobo preparation.

Adobo is the Philippines' proudest crossover dish, and we're always stoked when non-Filipinos pick up on it. The two remaining dishes in the gateway trifecta, meanwhile, have their roots in China. Inspired by the spring roll, lumpia are a must at the Filipino table, tightly wound wrappers filled with wildly personalized fillings (including banana) and deep-fried. Lo mein-like pancit, too, has countless variations, from the staple bihon and cellophane sotanghon to palabok, blanketed in hard-boiled eggs.

"When it's done well, you can't go wrong. It's universal," says Brown of this triumvirate. "Once they've had that good-*** pancit or adobo, they're hooked. They want to see what else is out there."



Our Love Affair With Pork

Seafood obviously plays an enormous role in the Filipino islander diet. Ubiquitous preparations here include kinilaw, the indigenous ceviche, pickled with vinegar, calamansi or both; and fried bangus, or milkfish. As is the case with many peasant cuisines, oxtail is a big deal, too—it's the base of kare-kare, a beef-and-peanut stew (thanks, Malayans) tinted orange with achiote oil (gracias, Mexico). And let's not forget the Philippines' lusty obsession with canned meat, especially corned beef and Spam (thanks, American Navy rations).

None of these proteins, however, come close to touching our special snout-to-tail relationship with baboy.

"Next to fish, the pig is the most important and accessible source of food for Filipinos," writes Amy Besa in Memories of Philippines Kitchens. Cebuanos enjoy the distinction of being top dog hog when it comes to the preparation of lechon, or whole roasted suckling pig (fight you for the cheeks), but they spin on spits everywhere. Numerous dishes can be gleaned from the whole animal, including lechon kawali, deep-fried pork belly, served with Mang Tomas "all-purpose sauce" and/or vinegar for dipping; and my personal Pinoy porcine obsession, crispy pata, or deep-fried pork knuckles.

Pork shoulder is the go-to for "Filipino barbecue," a skewered and grilled street snack marinated and glazed in a garlicky, tangy and sweet sauce made with a base of Coke or 7-Up. The other white meat is also where to look for offal-based preparations. The Kapampangan specialty sisig is a headcheese hash of sorts, featuring finely chopped cheek, snout, ears (awesomely referred to as "face" on some menus) and organs doused in citrus and spices, tossed with white onion and served in screaming-hot cast-iron pan like Chili's sizzling fajitas. Dinuguan is a thick brown stew of pork blood, which multiple generations of Filipino parents have sneakily mischaracterized as "chocolate meat" to get their progeny to eat it.

You may have noticed that we haven't touched much on vegetables. (Servers at Maharlika sardonically refer to their meat-free sides as the "Filipino allergy section.") It's true that the cuisine is unabashedly meat-centric, but there are plenty of veggies that play an important role in day-to-day cooking. The indigenous dish pinakbet brings some of the most popular—eggplant, string beans, ampalaya (bitter melon)—together in a bagoong-flavored stew that sometimes includes coconut milk (gata).



Why Isn't It Bigger?

Filipinos are one of the largest immigrant groups in the U.S., up there with Mexicans and Chinese in terms of stateside population. So why is it that Filipino food still seems to lag behind other Asian cuisines in terms of mainstream acceptance, "next big thing" nods notwithstanding?

Reasons abound. One of the most common is the fact that it's always been a staunchly family-oriented cooking tradition. "To this day, the best Filipino food is usually found in homes with a tradition of excellent home cooking, rather than in restaurants," writes Besa.

"For some reason, we've always been very apologetic about our cuisine," says Gilbuena. "I even get it from my mom. 'What, you're serving them dinuguan? They're not going to eat it!'" She's out to change that mentality singlehandedly, currently traveling the country with the goal of staging kamayan pop-ups in each of the 50 states.

Ponseca, who was motivated to open her restaurants by what she perceived as a dearth of accessible options, is optimistic about integration into the mainstream. "It's only a matter of time before everyone in America has tried Filipino food," she says.

LINK -> Coconut, Vinegar, and a Whole Lotta Pork: An Introduction to Filipino Cuisine | Serious Eats
 
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The only interesting thing i know about philippine is that they eat fried banana. Gotta try it some day.
 
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