Ellyn
Guru
First, let me tell you about bibingka. This is basically a baked or roasted coconut milk and rice flour pancake. Wikipedia thinks that people in the Philippines only has this on Christmas, but I personally like it enough to have it any time of the year, which was why I tried out one of these in miniature at the mall yesterday evening.
...Yeah, I'm not going to do that again. It was awfully dry, when one of my favorite things about this cake is how soft and even slightly juicy it can be, like tiramisu.
Still, the experience reminded me of a lot of funny things. One was the first time I tried bibingka with soft white cheese instead of the thin slices of Edam that it usually has (probably why it's associated with Christmas, then--I can have bibingka any time of the year, but the grocery stores that I go to have ordained that that particular cheese be reserved for the holidays.)
Where I live, too, the cake is frequently cooked with bits of hard-boiled salted duck egg, which I think really offsets the sweetness and adds a gummy texture that works just right.
A friend of mine, though, who's from Bacolod (I'm from metro Manila)-- was shocked and absolutely haaated the egg. She had to spit it back out, and I must admit that I laughed at her. In her town, she told me, nobody every puts salted egg in something sweet. That's just weird and wrong!
This probably isn't the only food in the world with regional differences. Can you think of a dish that you grew up with, that has a regional varieties like this?
...Yeah, I'm not going to do that again. It was awfully dry, when one of my favorite things about this cake is how soft and even slightly juicy it can be, like tiramisu.
Still, the experience reminded me of a lot of funny things. One was the first time I tried bibingka with soft white cheese instead of the thin slices of Edam that it usually has (probably why it's associated with Christmas, then--I can have bibingka any time of the year, but the grocery stores that I go to have ordained that that particular cheese be reserved for the holidays.)
Where I live, too, the cake is frequently cooked with bits of hard-boiled salted duck egg, which I think really offsets the sweetness and adds a gummy texture that works just right.
A friend of mine, though, who's from Bacolod (I'm from metro Manila)-- was shocked and absolutely haaated the egg. She had to spit it back out, and I must admit that I laughed at her. In her town, she told me, nobody every puts salted egg in something sweet. That's just weird and wrong!
This probably isn't the only food in the world with regional differences. Can you think of a dish that you grew up with, that has a regional varieties like this?