Dear Mom,
Whoopee! I finally have reason to believe that I can cook! I can hardly believe that I was able to conquer my holy grail, our pride, our national dish - the Adobong Manok. Last week, I whipped up a batch which Arns polished off with gusto. He reminded me of KFC's official slogan - "Finger lickin' good!" Watching him savoring every mouthful, punctuated by praises to the cook (that's me!), almost put tears to my eyes.
I have been trying to cook adobo before and the tasters always gave varied appraisals. Even I admit to myself that I never got it right. Arns taught me his version that is saucy and has ginger but I kept comparing it to the version that I grew up with at home, which I know to be the Tagalog version. Our version was dry and does not have ginger. I remember that the original recipe only uses garlic and vinegar. But my take includes onion, soy sauce and green chillies minus the bay leaf. Oh, there are bay leaves here but they are somehow too pungent to my liking. This goes so well with kaning lamig (cold rice).
I whipped up another batch last night and got another commendation from Kuya Jhun which sent me to the clouds. I feel ultra victorious! If I get this kind of reaction every time, I'll be wearing an apron 24/7!
Love,
Roni
Ingredients:
500g chicken, cut into pieces
4 cloves garlic, crushed
1 medium red onion, quartered
2 pcs green chillies, sliced
1/3 cup vinegar
1/3 cup soy sauce
1/3 cup water
a dash of freshly cracked peppercorns
salt and sugar (optional, only if you want it sweet) to taste
1 tbsp oil (optional)
Procedure:
Put the garlic, onion and chillies on the bottom of the pot. Arrange the chicken pieces on top so that they cover the entire bottom of the pot. Add pepper, vinegar, soy sauce and water. Cover and bring to a boil. Simmer while turning the chicken pieces so that both sides soak up the broth. When half the broth has disappeared, add salt and sugar to taste.
When almost dry, add oil and saute the chicken pieces until all is coated with it. This is optional especially if the chicken's own fat is enough to make the dish oily.
Serve warm with cold rice.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment