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A Bouche Amused

Category Archives: Kitchen Essentials

Getting a kick out of the perfect Paombong Vinegar — Sukang Bulacan

23 Thursday Apr 2015

Posted by a_bouche_amused in Come Taste My Philippines, Kitchen Essentials

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Nipa Palm Vinegar, Pamana ni Ka Mila, Poch Jorolan, Sukang Bulacan, Sukang Paombong, Sukang Sasâ

authentic Sukang Paombong

I love maasim! It’s a rare true-blue Pilipino who doesn’t love the taste of asim. And we use several pampaasim (or souring agent) for our favorite dishes. We have fruit — sampaloc (tamarind), kamias, santol, batwan. And we have vinegar. So many kinds of vinegar to choose from, in fact. Sukang Iloko (made from sugarcane), Sukang Tubâ (made from coconut), Sukang Pinakurat (made from fermented coconut sap but spiced up with mountain-grown “kulikot” chilis in Mindanao), many other variants of spicy vinegars the most famous of which is Iloilo’s Sukang Sinamak. And, of course, there’s Sukang Paombong. Or as I knew it in Pampanga, Sukang Sasâ (made from nipa palm).

Sukang sasâ is what my Kapampangan grandparents used to put in their dishes, such as paksiw, sinigang, dinuguan, etc. I’ve been craving it for quite some time now, but somehow, the ones I’ve tried simply did not measure up. They did not have that distinctly flavorsome sourness that my tastebuds recall.

Then Poch Jorolan came along.

Poch Jorolan, himself a chef, is the scion of the Santos-Jorolan family that established and still runs the famous and much loved Everybody’s Cafe, which is regarded as the go-to place for classic Pampanga cuisine. Poch gave me a bottle of authentic Sukang Paombong/Sasâ to try, which he and his partner, son of Bulacan’s esteemed food historian and culinary icons, Ka Milagros Enriquez, have developed. It is called Pamana ni Ka Mila Sukang Bulacan.

I didn’t realize then that Sukang Sasâ (from Pampanga) and Sukang Paombong (from Bulacan) were actually one and the same. The marshy environs of Bulacan and Pampanga are ideal habitats for the nipa palm, which is called sasâ. And sukang Paombong is named after the municipality of Paombong, Bulacan, where nipa palm vinegar-making was once the primary industry. The 1991 eruption of Mt. Pinatubo, however, had decimated most of the nipa palm plantations of Pampanga; that is why, for many years, authentic Kapampangan sukang sasâ was difficult to find.

Nypa_fruticans_Blanco2.386

This botanical illustration is from Wikimedia Commons, the free media repository

Now I’m no professional taster but I do love my vinegar. So I figured tasting vinegar is similar to tasting wine. I poured about 10 ml (or 4 tablespoons) of the vinegar into a small glass cup and swirled the liquid to bring together the vinegar’s natural aromas. Then I inhaled. The aroma was just how I remembered sukang sasâ smelled. Sour, of course, but not too sharp. It has a gentle kick — a full-bodied, well-rounded flavor and just the perfect amount of acidity which other vinegars do not have. I slurped a bit of the vinegar — the sourness was touched with just a nuance of sweetness and a delicate woody taste. I love it! I love it so much that I just have to drink it after soaking — yes, soaking, not just dipping — my favorite grilled liempo, daing, tuyô, tapa, chicharon bulaklak, tokwa’t baboy, and… well, you get the idea! (I bet you guys do the same thing.) Yes, this is the vinegar I’ve been searching for! Dacal a salamat, Poch.

To all vinegar lovers like myself, you’ll be pleased to know that Pamana ni Ka Mila’s Sukang Bulacan will soon be available at the outdoor weekend markets in Salcedo Village and Ayala Alabang Village. But for now, if you’re interested, you may get in touch with Poch Jorolan directly. To order, SMS him at 09175108961 or email him at poch168@gmail.com.

Ask him, too, about the Nipa Palm syrup, which is an all-natural and effective remedy for allergy, especially allergic rhinitis. I’m getting some of that, too.

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Best Cooking Tips Ever!

22 Thursday Jan 2015

Posted by a_bouche_amused in Kitchen Essentials

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Christine Byrne

Thank you, Christine Byrne of Buzzfeed.com, for these wonderfully helpful tips!

http://www.buzzfeed.com/christinebyrne/cooking-charts?&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Food+118&utm_content=Food+118+CID_b93366caecfdf665dd14a31b07e77575&utm_source=Campaign+Monitor&utm_term=These+diagrams+have+all+the+answers#.bt9p9AVax

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Sriracha! Hot -chacha!

21 Sunday Sep 2014

Posted by a_bouche_amused in Kitchen Essentials

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David Tran, sriracha sauce

Hot Sauce Lawsuithttp://qz.com/132738/the-highly-unusual-company-behind-siracha-the-worlds-coolest-hot-sauce/

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Be a Smart Cook…ie

11 Friday Jan 2013

Posted by a_bouche_amused in Kitchen Essentials

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cast-iron care, keep herbs fresh

After a lifetime mastering the art of eating well, learning how to cook… and cook well or at least cooking well enough for the food to be edible… is a joyful adventure. I love cooking with my cast-iron pan, mainly because they retain heat well and cooking temperatures stay even and consistent. So no well-done food on one side and raw on the other unless I screw-up majorly, that is. Unfortunately, I’ve had a pan or two damaged by my yaya who can’t believe that she should not scrub and wash the pan with soap after it’s used. So I end up buying a new one every few years. But with proper care, a really good and solid cast-iron pan can give great cooking pleasure for many many years… even generations.cast-iron care

http://bcove.me/p89zdsa6

There are more smart cooking tips at the RealAge website… like how to keep the freshness of one’s herbs… for wanna-bes like me (and perhaps you, too?) who dream of being a smart cook…ie. [-ิ_•ิ]

http://www.realage.com/videos/?bclid=5030525001&bctid=16650836001freshherbs

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I need a meat cleaver!

11 Tuesday Sep 2012

Posted by a_bouche_amused in Kitchen Essentials

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cleaver, Dexter-Russell cleaver

Dexter-Russell 7″ Cleaver

No, I’m not going to Sweeney Todd anybody. It’s just that our old meat cleaver is so old,  it bounces when we try to cut through bone! It’s so old, even our cook’s dentures are sharper! But what kind of cleaver to buy? Should I get one with a 6-inch or an 8-inch blade? It’s gotta be bad-ass tough, for sure! With just the right heft and balance for me to be able to cut through bones — to get to them succulent marrows, of course! Or to chop up the Lechon Kawali neatly — and rip through chicken flesh and sinew…

Martin Yan, TV celeb chef, said he created the perfect meat cleaver — not the Chinese cleaver, which is basically a cleaver-shaped chef’s knife that Chinese chefs like to use — but I couldn’t find it on Amazon. So I googled. First I found this review of the best cleavers, tested by Denise Landis, author and NY Times recipe tester in the New York Times website : http://www.nytimes.com/slideshow/2008/01/01/dining/20080102_KITC_SLIDESHOW_index.html

Then I saw this website — http://www.seriouseats.com/2010/08/how-to-choose-buy-care-for-a-meat-cleaver.html

Hmmm…Dexter, huh? My favorite serial killer! Sounds real bad-ass to me. Well okay, technically the brand name is Dexter-Russell, but you get what I mean. 6-inch, 7-inch, or 8-inch…? Hmmm… I think this is the cleaver I want. Now to look for it.

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