Menu

News


Quotes

Most Filipinos like a dessert or two with every meal, be it ripe fruits, sweets or especially prepared treats. The art of making sweets from fruits, rinds, root crops and other foods is also one way of preserving them. Generally, however, Filipinos like desserts because they have a sweet tooth.


Filipino Pork and Beef Recipe, Filipino Chicken Recipe, Filipino Seafoods Recipe, Filipino Dessert and Salad Recipe, Filipino Merienda (snacks) Recipe, Filipino Vegetable, rice, noodle Recipe, Filipino soups and sauce Recipe


Filipino+dessert


Halo-halo (from Tagalog halo, "mix") is a popular Filipino dessert that is a mixture of shaved ice and milk to which are added various boiled sweet beans and fruits, and served cold in a tall glass or bowl.There is no specific recipe for this dessert, and a wide variety of ingredients are used. The order in which the ingredients are added varies widely. Primary ingredients generally include boiled red mung beans, kidney beans, garbanzos, sugar palm fruit (kaong), coconut sport (macapuno), and plantains caramelized in sugar. Other components may include jackfruit (langka), star apple, tapioca or sago, nata de coco, purple yam (ube) or sweet potato (kamote), sweetened corn kernels or pounded crushed young rice (pinipig), leche flan or custard, ice cream and gelatin. Other fruits, such as papayas, avocados, kiwifruit, bananas or cherries, may also be added. Some preparations also include ice cream on top of the halo-halo.Generally, condensed milk or evaporated milk is used instead of fresh milk, due to the tropical climate of the Philippines.In terms of arrangement, most of the ingredients (fruits, beans, and other sweets) are first placed inside the tall glass, followed by the shaved ice. This is then sprinkled with sugar, and topped with either (or a combination of) leche flan, ube halaya, or ice cream. Condensed milk is poured into the mixture upon serving.The dessert exemplifies the "east-meets-west" culture of the Filipinos, with the ingredients used coming from a wide variety of influences (to cite some examples: red mung beans which are from the Chinese, garbanzos from the Indian, leche flan from the Spanish, and shaved ice itself which was introduced to the islands by the Americans).

Search for more information on Filipino+dessert:
<

Navigation

[ A - C ]

[ D - K ]

[ L - Q ]

[ R - Z ]

.com food kraft
2004 coke commercial diet
Anarchys cook book
Ancient dessert greek
Angel cake dessert food
Arabic food recipe
Atlanta bread factory
Atlantic federation salmon
Australia food import
Bake cheesecake cherry no recipe
Bake chicken recipe rice
Baked chicken sesame
Baked eggplant recipe
Banana+dessert+split
Banana custard pudding
Barbecue marinade recipe
Beef best cut
Bergen food spanish
Bodrum flight turkey
Boston cooking school
Box bread vintage
Bran free muffin sugar
Bran fruit healthy muffin recipe
Bread bread vs wheat white
Brownie nestle recipe
Butter cake chocolate peanut
Cake candle favor wedding
Cake dessert mix recipe
Calorie+low+pasta+recipe
Carb chicken dish low
Casserole king ranch recipe
Chain fish food jelly
Chicken chinese recipe sour sweet
Chicken coconut soup
Chili dog hot recipe sauce
Cincinnati food healthy
Cinco de kid mayo recipe
Club cooking hueys
Cook+book+cooking
Cooking+rib
Cooking genies southern
Dallas mexican food
Dish network.com
Dish salmon side
Dish satellite setup
Dog supply food
Food french traditional
Food gourmet middlesex store
Food hawaiian local
Food protein soy
French+recipe
Fresh salsa recipe
Gourmet cheesecake recipe
Gourmet cooking supply
High fiber food recipe
Italian food product
Joy of cooking recipe
Kid meal quick
Loaf meat recipe watcher weight
Low fat seafood recipe
No carb diet plan
Pulled pork barbecue
Recipe salmon salsa
Roast+peanut
Shrimp+sauce
Type 2 diabetic diet