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Dinuguan

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Dinuguan
A bowl of dinuguan and a plate of puto
Alternative namesPork blood stew, blood pudding stew
TypeStew
CourseMain course
Place of originPhilippines
Serving temperatureHot
Main ingredientsPork offal, pig's blood, vinegar, garlic, siling haba

Dinuguan (Tagalog pronunciation: [dɪnʊgʊˈʔan]) is a Filipino savory stew usually of pork offal (typically lungs, kidneys, intestines, ears, heart and snout) and/or meat simmered in a rich, spicy dark gravy of pig blood, garlic, chili (most often siling haba), and vinegar.[1]

Etymology and names

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Dinuguan served with puto (Filipino rice cake).
Can also be eaten with tuyo (fried dried fish)

The most popular term, dinuguan, and other regional naming variants come from their respective words for "blood" (e.g., "dugo" in Tagalog means "blood," hence "dinuguan" as "to be stewed with blood" or "bloody soup"). Possible English translations include pork blood stew or blood pudding stew.[2]

Dinuguan is also called sinugaok in Batangas, zinagan in Ibanag, twik in Itawis, tid-tad in Kapampangan, dinardaraan in Ilocano, dugo-dugo in Cebuano, rugodugo in Waray, sampayna or champayna in Northern Mindanao, and tinumis in Bulacan and Nueva Ecija. A nickname for this dish is "chocolate meat".

Dinuguan is also found in the Marianas Islands, believed to have been introduced to the islands by Filipino immigrants, where it is known locally as fritada.[3]

Description

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This dish is rather similar to the Polish soup czernina or an even more ancient Spartan dish known as melas zomos (black soup) whose primary ingredients were pork, vinegar and blood.

Dinuguan can also be served without using any offal, using only choice cuts of pork. In Batangas, this version is known as sinungaok. It can also be made from beef and chicken meat, the latter being known as dinuguang manok ('chicken dinuguan').[4][5] Dinuguan is usually served with white rice or a Philippine rice cake called puto.[4] The Northern Luzon versions of the dish, namely the Ilocano dinardaraan and the Ibanag zinagan are often drier with toppings of deep-fried pork intestine cracklings. The Itawes of Cagayan also have a pork-based version that has larger meat chunks and more fat, which they call twik.

The most important ingredient of the dinuguan recipe, pig's blood, is used in many other Asian cuisines either as coagulated blood acting as a meat extender or as a mixture for the broth itself. Pork dinuguan is the latter.[5][6]

The dish is not consumed by religious groups that have dietary laws prohibiting the consumption of blood, most notably the indigenous Iglesia ni Cristo, Jehovah's Witnesses, Seventh-day Adventists, Muslims and Jews.

Preparation

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Ingredients for dinuguan.
Pork is sautéed in garlic and onions until fragrant
Addition of water, bay leaves, pepper, and blood to pot.
Dinuguan simmering

Dinuguan is typically made with pork, pork blood, peppers, onion, garlic, water, white vinegar, bay leaves and sugar. The onion is sautéed, then garlic and pork is added. Water is boiled in the same pot, then the bay leaves and vinegar are added. It is simmered until it is thick, then sugar, salt and black pepper is added.[7]

List of other regional variations

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Tinumis from Nueva Ecija
Tinumis from Nueva Ecija, which uses tamarind instead of vinegar as a souring agent
Paleo version of dinuguan

Other regional variants of dinuguan include:[8]

  • In Aklan, it is called dinuguan sa batwan, using the batwan fruit.
  • In Bulacan, it is called serkele/sirkele, a specialty similar in ingredients to dinuguan but without pig's blood and using beef internal organs; soupy and on the sour side; other reports cow blood is used.
  • In Marinduque, a local variant known as kari-kari is cooked with the same ingredients but is stewed until almost dry before the pork blood is added.
  • In Bicol, it is called tinutungang dinuguan, meaning, it contains coconut milk and chilies; it is called such because coconut milk is added, and charcoal embers are used to  cook the milk until curdling point at which it forms creamy reduction or latik.
  • In Capiz, dinuguan na manok sa pinulipot nga abalong.
  • In Cebu, dugo-dugo, which has itself many versions, with some adding cubes of solidified blood, just like in Pampanga's tid-tad, and other versions omitting the pork liver from the dish while the innards are chopped so finely down to the millimetre, so that the end result is a pork blood stew without the recognizable ingredients.
  • In the Ilocos Region, in San Nicolas, it is a crispy dinuguan that uses bagnet slices. While in Ilocos Norte, it is called mollo, a brownish and watery version of dinuguan.
  • In Laguna, dinuguang kalabaw, dinuguan using the more flavorful "carabeef".
  • In Leyte (Southern), it is mixed with banana blossoms and pig's blood.
  • In Manila, dinuguan sa usbong ng sampalok, a Tagalog blood stew with young tamarind leaves.
  • In Masbate, it is called sinanglay, where they add tanglad (lemongrass).
  • In Northern Mindanao, it is called sampayna or champayna and also uses lemongrass.
  • In Pampanga, dinuguang puti, synonym for tidtad babi which is not black or brown unlike the usual dinuguan because the blood is torn into pieces by hand after it curdles.
  • In Pangasinan, it is called baguisen; it uses kamias as a souring agent; the offal is washed with detergent then boiled in guava leaves to get rid of the smell; in Barangay Inirangan, Bayambang, they include upo slices in their baguisen.
  • In Quezon Province, it is called pirihil, a dinuguan of chicken gizzard, heart and liver.
  • In Visayas, called paklay, a Visayan blood stew of blood and intestine of goat, but a little bit drier.
  • In Zamboanga/Basilan or Cavite (Chavacano), "Chavacano-style dinuguan", which uses tuba (sugar cane) vinegar and contains crushed oregano leaves.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Margarita Marquis (2007). La Cuisine des Philippines (in French). Editions Publibook. ISBN 978-2-7483-3506-4.
  2. ^ Emily Ignacio (2005). Building diaspora: Filipino community formation on the Internet. Rutgers University Press. ISBN 978-0-8135-3514-2.
  3. ^ "Taste of Guam: Making pork, beef or venison blood stew". Stars and Stripes Guam. August 11, 2022. Archived from the original on September 11, 2022. Retrieved September 11, 2022.
  4. ^ a b Alan Davidson & Tom Jaine (2006). The Oxford companion to food. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-280681-9.
  5. ^ a b "Dinuguan a la Ate Angelina". MarketManila. July 26, 2006.
  6. ^ "Easy Pork Dinuguan Recipe". RecipeniJuan. November 11, 2016.
  7. ^ "Pork Dinuguan Recipe". Panlasang Pinoy. December 13, 2018. Retrieved March 25, 2020.
  8. ^ "List of varieties of dinuguan and other dishes that use blood". Retrieved October 28, 2018.