Thailand's Most Popular Breakfast Menu
In Thailand, rice congee or “Jok”is normally served as breakfast. Raw or half-cooked eggs are normally added. There are different variations like jok with minced pork, beef, etc. Other ingredients are spring onions, garlic, spicy pickles, radish, etc.
7:26 AM | Labels: Congee, Jok | 0 Comments
Singapore and Malaysia's Most Popular Breakfast Menu
In Singapore, the traditional breakfast of Singaporeans consist of bread, rice, eggs and meat. The most popular includes, Kaya Toast, Nasi Lemak, Roti Parathas, Bak Kut Teh and Koo chye kueh.
Kaya Toast
Kaya Toast is the signature breakfast of Singapore. It is actually a paste made from coconut milk, sugar, vanilla, eggs and pandan leaves. The coconut milk is cooked slowly along with the rest of the ingredients to form a batter or paste. It is then spread into a slice of bread along with a small amount of butter.Nasi Lemak

Nasi Lemak is rice cooked in coconut milk with small amount of ginger, lemon grass or pandan leaves. It is served with chicken, beef or fish.
Roti Parathas

Roti Parathas is just like Pancakes but a bit crispy kind of pastry. It is served with spicy sauce for dipping.
Wonton Noodles

Wonton noodles are made of minced pork or whole shrimp cooked with ginger, onion, sesame oil and soy sauce. They are mixed with the noodles and served very hot.
Bak Kut Teh

Bak Kut Teh is a kind of soup made from pork ribs cook with spices like garlic, anise, cinnamon, lettuce, mushrooms and dried tofu. Pork bones are included in cooking for added flavor. This dish is usually eaten with rice or noodles.
7:14 AM | Labels: Bak Kuh Teh, Kaya Toast, Nasi Lemak, Roti Parathas, Wonton Noodles | 0 Comments
Philippines Most Popular Breakfast Menu
In the Philippines, the traditional breakfast of Filipinos consist of rice, bread, egg, meat or fish. How these basic choices or ingredients are prepared, depend on their eating habits. But typically Filipinos are heavy breakfast eaters especially those whose work entails more physical exertion.
Almost always, rice being the staple food of Filipinos, is always present in the breakfast menu. Normally cooked rice is fried with just salt and garlic. Rice is eaten with either fried dried fish or meat with fresh tomatoes on the sides. Breakfast meat comes in many forms, like longanisa (native pork sausage), tapa (beef slices), sausage, corned beef, among others. The light breakfast eaters would settle for Pandesal, native bread stuff with butter, jelly, egg or meat. Some would just take it plain or dipped into hot chocolate or coffee. Here are some samples of typical Filipino breakfast:

Almost always, rice being the staple food of Filipinos, is always present in the breakfast menu. Normally cooked rice is fried with just salt and garlic. Rice is eaten with either fried dried fish or meat with fresh tomatoes on the sides. Breakfast meat comes in many forms, like longanisa (native pork sausage), tapa (beef slices), sausage, corned beef, among others. The light breakfast eaters would settle for Pandesal, native bread stuff with butter, jelly, egg or meat. Some would just take it plain or dipped into hot chocolate or coffee. Here are some samples of typical Filipino breakfast:

7:06 AM | Labels: Daing na Bangus, Pandesal, Tapa, Tapsilog | 0 Comments
10 Hottest "Pinoy" Must-Eats
When you stay in the Philippines particularly Manila for a few days or years, you need to eat these ten hottest things for bragging rights:
1. Balut. That little duck egg deserves praise, instead of derision. Its better eating it with the chick rather than digging a place in the earth and burying it and let it rot, like what the Chinese do with their duck eggs. Foreigners who experience eating this stuff swear that it leaves them speechless. It does’nt have after-taste, the kind you experience eating century eggs.
2. Adidas. It’s not your favorite sneakers. Its barbequed chicken innards. Yes. If you like eating patte, Pinoys have their own version of patte, albeit, in its “naked” form.
3. Goto. Its porridge dear with its usual heavenly stuff all there. I think goto is something purely Pinoy because it has your chicken (or beef), your ginger (luya, that what makes it real tasty), your rice stuff and a dash of salt and fish sauce.
4. Kaleskesan. This is an authentic Pangasinense dish that’s very simple. Some pieces of beef meat sprinkled with garlic and onion sprouts, left to boil and added with some “secret” spice. Yummy.
5. Dinuguan. When I was a child, I love eating this dirty stuff. However, when I read the Bible and learned that it’s one of the most prohibited cuisines known to man, I avoided it like a plague. This Pinoy cuisine is dangerous to eat since it consists of blood. Many Pinoys however eat that stuff simply because it has a sour taste, with shreds of pork in it. The combination is wonderful, yet, it nullifies your ticket to heaven.
6. Oysters. Pinoy oysters are one of the best food stuffs in the Philippines. Compared with what we export in other countries, our oysters are one of the best there is in the world, I think.
7. Escargo. Pinoys love to eat escargo or your lowly “kuhol”, especially when cooked with coconut. There’s a uniquely Pinoy way of cooking escargo that Frenchmen would surely love.
8. Sinigang sa miso. Try boiling your favorite fish (lapu-lapu for example) and when it’s soft already, get tamarinds and let it cook there ( a few handfuls would be okey). When the taste of the tamarinds mix with the fish, try putting two to three green long chilis in there (the local ones), then onions. When everything is mixed, put some leavy vegetables in there (kangkong would be nice). Bring all together in a boil and you have your sinigang sa miso. It’s not complete though if you don’t put miso.
9. Bulalo. It’s just your usual beef stew, with your potatoes, beef cubes, taste enhancers, petchay, some whole peppercorns and your petchay.
10. Kwek-kwek. Its just hard boiled egg mixed with orange-colored flour deep fried.
1. Balut. That little duck egg deserves praise, instead of derision. Its better eating it with the chick rather than digging a place in the earth and burying it and let it rot, like what the Chinese do with their duck eggs. Foreigners who experience eating this stuff swear that it leaves them speechless. It does’nt have after-taste, the kind you experience eating century eggs.
2. Adidas. It’s not your favorite sneakers. Its barbequed chicken innards. Yes. If you like eating patte, Pinoys have their own version of patte, albeit, in its “naked” form.
3. Goto. Its porridge dear with its usual heavenly stuff all there. I think goto is something purely Pinoy because it has your chicken (or beef), your ginger (luya, that what makes it real tasty), your rice stuff and a dash of salt and fish sauce.
4. Kaleskesan. This is an authentic Pangasinense dish that’s very simple. Some pieces of beef meat sprinkled with garlic and onion sprouts, left to boil and added with some “secret” spice. Yummy.
5. Dinuguan. When I was a child, I love eating this dirty stuff. However, when I read the Bible and learned that it’s one of the most prohibited cuisines known to man, I avoided it like a plague. This Pinoy cuisine is dangerous to eat since it consists of blood. Many Pinoys however eat that stuff simply because it has a sour taste, with shreds of pork in it. The combination is wonderful, yet, it nullifies your ticket to heaven.
6. Oysters. Pinoy oysters are one of the best food stuffs in the Philippines. Compared with what we export in other countries, our oysters are one of the best there is in the world, I think.
7. Escargo. Pinoys love to eat escargo or your lowly “kuhol”, especially when cooked with coconut. There’s a uniquely Pinoy way of cooking escargo that Frenchmen would surely love.
8. Sinigang sa miso. Try boiling your favorite fish (lapu-lapu for example) and when it’s soft already, get tamarinds and let it cook there ( a few handfuls would be okey). When the taste of the tamarinds mix with the fish, try putting two to three green long chilis in there (the local ones), then onions. When everything is mixed, put some leavy vegetables in there (kangkong would be nice). Bring all together in a boil and you have your sinigang sa miso. It’s not complete though if you don’t put miso.
9. Bulalo. It’s just your usual beef stew, with your potatoes, beef cubes, taste enhancers, petchay, some whole peppercorns and your petchay.
10. Kwek-kwek. Its just hard boiled egg mixed with orange-colored flour deep fried.
5:14 AM | Labels: Balut, Manila, Must-eat | 0 Comments
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