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lakwatsera
05-24-2009, 07:40 AM
Balut

http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_p4pp9fAC3-U/SQQoOws0_oI/AAAAAAAAApE/8Kz9k3GnDhg/s400/balut.jpg

What It Is - The notorious boiled fertilized duck's egg. Duck's egg usually takes 28 days to hatch but the perfect balut is boiled at 17 days, when the chick is still wrapped in white and showing no beak or feathers.

Where You'll Find It - The town of Pateros and neighboring towns of Rizal in Metro Manila

Dish On The Dish - There is an art to eating balut. First, make sure it's hot. hold up the egg and determine the wider end; lightly tapping it here will allow you to savor the balut's tasty broth. Break off a piece of eggshell and then take a sip - you may want to salt it before doing so. Once all the soup has been sipped, crack the rest of the egg, peel it open and sprinkle it with rock salt. The yolk is firm yet tender and the chick should go down smooth and sweet. Said to be an aphrodisiac, balut is traditionally sold by vendors who do their rounds on the streets peddling the eggs in baskets in the evening, bellowing, "Baluuuuuuuut!" The menfolk like to gather at street corner sari-sari stores with their bottles of beer or gin and balut as pulutan (bar chow), spending many a happy happy hour.

Tamilok

http://z.hubpages.com/u/661704_f248.jpg

What It Is - Woodworm found in driftwoods.

Where You'll Find It - Agusan, Surigao and Davao provinces.

Dish On The Dish - Tamilok is not for the squeamish nor the faint of heart. The experience of eating it is more risque than eating sushi. Forget raw; these worms are eaten alive! The driftwood is chopped so you are able to extract pink juicy worms measuring six to eight inches long. The worms are then washed then dropped onto the tounge. Fans love the clean taste and the tingling sensation through the digestive tract.

Kamaro

http://www.rarelyordered.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/11/kamaro.jpg

What It Is - A mole cricket that burrows in the moist soil of growing rice fields.

Where You'll Find It - Pampanga

Dish On The Dish - These mole crickets are the most delicious pulutan in Pampanga, a foodie province known for delicious dishes, the country's best cooks and most discriminating gourmands. The kamaro catchers stomp their bare feet on the soil to make the crickets surface, causing them to jump and fly awkwardly, making them easy to catch. cooking them is even more laborious. The cricket's legs and wings must be removed, after which the body is boiled in vinegar and garlic. It is then sauteed in oil, chopped oinion and tomatoes until they are chocolate brown in color. Kamaro is a party in your mouth with every bite: the initial crunch gives way to a moist interior, making it a perfect pairing with ice-cold beer. Without the wings and legs, there is no scratchy texture.


Paniki

What It Is - A fruit bat that feeds on over-ripe lanzones, jackfruit, durian and other tree fruit.

Where You'll Find It - The Philippines has over 50 species of fruit bats found throughout the country, including Subic, tha Samal Caves in Davao ans San Juan, Batangas

Dish On The Dish - Batman, beware! Nothing is spared of the fruit bat once it's been caught. To prepare it for cooking, the entire bat is skinned, and the two glands found at the base of its limbs are removed. It is then chopped into bite-sized pieces, sauteed in oil, garlic, vinegar, tomatoes, pepper, laurel leaves and simmered until the broth has almost dried out. Although some Filipinos consider these fruit bats a delicacy, eating them must be stopped since many bat species are close to becoming endangered. These fruit bats play an important role as they help to maintain the biodiversity of the Philippines' ecological system by propagating fruit-bearing trees.

Ant Eggs

What They Are - The eggs of tree ants

Where You'll Find Them - Ilocos Norte

Dish On The Dish - Known as the caviar of Ilocos' wealthy set, they are found on the branches of certain mango trees where these ants make their homes. You need an expert who can detect them from under the trees branches. Gathering them requires a light hand and fleet feet as the sound of foot steps makes these ants hide their eggs. Flat baskets are attached under the branches and the tree is shaken vigorously until the eggs fall into the baskets. These are fried in butter. the result: A crisp shell on th outside and creamy filling on the inside.

Betute Tugak

What It Is - Stuffed frog

Where You'll find It - Pampanga

Dish On The Dish - Farmers used to depend on rain water to irrigater their farms. Children would then catch the frogs, which came out during the rainy season, while their parents cultivated the land or planted rice. Outwitting the frogs has been a traditional "family bonding" ritual. Betute is a play of words on butete, which means "tadpole" in the local dialect. Betute is the entire frog stuffed with minced pork - so it looks like a very fat frog. It is then deep-fried in oil.

source:http://www.bukisa.com/articles/9818_philippines-exotic-foods

megan21
05-24-2009, 08:20 AM
those are the kind of food andrew in bizarre foods will surely eat! haha :D

jimmitumbleweed
05-24-2009, 08:43 AM
there is also ABATOD - a larva of big moths. these moths find a rotting Bahi tree or a similar specie of tree and lay their eggs in it. 2-4 months later locals find these trees to look for these Protein rich larva's. they are white and about the size of ur thumb.. they are also eaten raw, its still squirming when u pick it up and u just put it in your mouth and start chewing...its described to be milky in taste. Locals such as the manubo's (indegenous people in surigao) look forward to eating these.. its like a treat for them. They Luv it!

Subsistence
05-24-2009, 11:49 AM
Exotic for me are:

Balut, Dogs, Frogs, Snakes

More Exotic than that will not be edible for my stomach.

I've watched on T.V. that challengers of a local t.v. show ate the "egg" of a cow, the eye of it. Ahhh I wouldn't want to be in that situation. :(

MissLee
05-24-2009, 12:26 PM
This restaurant is famous for their exotic foods. If you are curious how beetles, frogs, snakes, bayawak, etc. taste like...then you should try this place.

I've tried eating adobong palaka (frog) but I had to put plenty of chili powder. It tastes like chicken...just daze yourself a bit and don't imagine poor 'froggy' when 'he' was still alive.

jbrayos
05-24-2009, 03:53 PM
Have you tried the sinigang na palaka?

MissLee
05-24-2009, 04:28 PM
Not yet. Have you? How do you find it?

Kmonge
05-24-2009, 04:55 PM
when i was a kid my drunken uncles ate my sick puppy...
recently i foudn out that in mindanao, its a common thing to eat dog. My friends dog was eaten by his neighbor cuz he needed to feed his guests during his baby's baptism and he didn't have enough money... the guests loved my my friends dog.. they make caldereta out of him. :(

lakwatsera
05-24-2009, 05:20 PM
Have you tried the sinigang na palaka?

when i was in grade school my father cook palaka with atsuete just dont know if that is sinigang because it mixed with kamias.

stella
05-25-2009, 05:18 AM
My dad and his friends cooked my pets rabbits while I was away on vacation. I was mortified...but he said they tasted like chicken...does that count as exotic?

Subsistence
05-25-2009, 04:28 PM
That counts as a PET KILLER to me! How can you kill something so cute as a rabbit and eat it!?

Nah just fooling around. :P

It's exotic since, I don't normally see people eating rabbits.

purpleaf
05-26-2009, 01:31 AM
Balut, to me, is exotic enough. Yet I never dared eat the formed duck itself.

Pampanga's Everyboy's Cafe serves "exotic foods." You should go try it!

bobot
05-26-2009, 02:53 AM
i was able to eat everything from the first list except the woodworm from driftwood.

it's not too bad really. what we are just fearing are pictures from our mind. all the horrible stuff about these things. but once you get to taste them, man!

p.s. don't have too much balut, it raises cholesterol levels higher. hahhaa

moohlan
05-26-2009, 08:43 AM
I want to try the fried beetle or piniritong salagubang

I heard it taste better than it sounds.:)

stella
05-26-2009, 03:09 PM
I heard people from moutainous areas eat snakes and rats too. Aren't those animals poisonous though?

anj_fire
05-26-2009, 03:12 PM
There is this type of frog that Ilocano eats during rainy seasons. It is called "tokak". It is usually cooked adobo style. The other one is "pilat". This type of frog is my favorite. We take its skin off, clean it, then fry it. It's like fried chicken. =) Last I ate this was when I was 7 or 8 years old. hehe. Another one is the "abal-abal" and "aros-aros". I think these are like the coconut beetle but kind of smaller. They only come out in May after the first rain comes. This usually signals the rainy season (when there's no global warming yet.) But they never get me to eat these as they actually evolve from "pusa-pusa", a white larvae, like a catterpillar that can be found in the soil. When the "balang" (swarm of grasshopers) attacked our rice fields, we caught a lot of them and my grandmother fried them. Their really tasty and crispy like chicharon, even better.. =)

kookay
06-02-2009, 05:20 AM
There's is a place called balaw-balaw in angono, rizal and they specialize in exotic delicacies. We tried the adobong bayawak and it was delicious! The only downside I found in the dish was that the bayawak had many tiny bones so it's kinda sticks sometimes.

But they also have grubworms and fried crispy alagao leaves as appetizers. yummy!

esembrano
06-03-2009, 04:26 AM
have you tried eating frog? it tastes like chicken..yummy

kookay
06-03-2009, 03:54 PM
have you tried eating frog? it tastes like chicken..yummy

Yep, frog does taste like a bony chicken. Pampanga is known for good frog recipes. :)

kookay
06-03-2009, 03:55 PM
Another exotic delicacy one should try is the grasshopper or camaron in Pampangueno I think.

Best fried adobo style. Very delicious and crunchy.

anj_fire
06-03-2009, 03:59 PM
Another exotic delicacy one should try is the grasshopper or camaron in Pampangueno I think.

Best fried adobo style. Very delicious and crunchy.

I agree fried grasshopper is sooo tasty. I'll eat it anytime it is served. =)

kookay
06-11-2009, 04:36 PM
I heard people from moutainous areas eat snakes and rats too. Aren't those animals poisonous though?

Yes, they do. I guess they know the edible variety. Basically, these animals are organic if ever and could be quite good for us too. :P

ccuevas
06-11-2009, 04:40 PM
one must try balut if your in manila, you must eat it in the dark so you wont see your eating, goodluck to those who are brave to try it! they say its a source of potassium also.

balut was featured in fear factor US. try it to find out why?

anj_fire
06-11-2009, 04:47 PM
when i was a kid my drunken uncles ate my sick puppy...
recently i foudn out that in mindanao, its a common thing to eat dog. My friends dog was eaten by his neighbor cuz he needed to feed his guests during his baby's baptism and he didn't have enough money... the guests loved my my friends dog.. they make caldereta out of him. :(

it is a common thing anywhere. My pet was chosen to be eaten when I was in elementary. I was smart, I traded it for a keyboard. hehehe

ccuevas
06-12-2009, 02:28 AM
is eating kambing exotic? well i heard its cleaner than pigs cause it only eats grass and nothing else unlike pigs that eats anything to everything.

ccuevas
06-12-2009, 02:31 AM
balut a fertilized duck egg, is a filipino delicacy. they are often served with beer.

popularly believed to be an aphrodisiac and considered a high-protein, hearty snack, balut are mostly sold in the streets vendors but now there are also stalls in the mall that sell balut like eggstacy.

zeeroigh
02-21-2010, 03:20 PM
i believed bayawak is listed on the exotic foods line up. its also an expensive one

pces
02-22-2010, 02:26 PM
is eating kambing exotic? well i heard its cleaner than pigs cause it only eats grass and nothing else unlike pigs that eats anything to everything.

I don't think eating kambing is exotic. It is sold everywhere in Pinas and I believe it is one of the other choices of Muslims.

i believed bayawak is listed on the exotic foods line up. its also an expensive one.

I have not tasted Bayawak and I didn't even know that eating it is allowed in the Philippines. Whew.

zeeroigh
02-25-2010, 01:35 AM
I agree fried grasshopper is sooo tasty. I'll eat it anytime it is served. =)

how does fried grasshopper taste?:confused:

exotix
02-26-2010, 01:24 PM
Eating grasshoppers sound weird to me. Maybe that's why it's called exotic. Er. But how does that taste? I wish there is a store that sells that in Manila.

However, I think that the government should be aware about the species that we are eating. We may be eating endangered species. They should regulate what the citizens consume.

dyna
02-27-2010, 03:34 AM
how does fried grasshopper taste?:confused:

It might taste like fried shrimps...I don't know...haven't tried it but the fried hoppers look like shrimps...

Adamson Beecham
05-19-2010, 11:59 AM
These are all the nice and scrumptious meal, and all the dishes are delicious and sumptuous and the prices do differ from menu to menu and almost there is a varying trend has been occurred in all the prices of food.

This is a simple and easy recipe, which can be prepared by frugal resources as well, a pretty delicious and sumptuous meal which is presented as a main course of meal as well.