Panay News

WV culinary heritage, slow food, biodiversi­ty showcased

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ILOILO City – To mark the recent Filipino Food Month, the Iloilo Provincial Culture, Arts, History, and Tourism Office teamed up with the Department of Tourism (DOT) in promoting Western Visayas’ cultural heritage and slow food ingredient­s.

“Part of the cultural heritage of our province is our indigenous food and our local recipes. We are trying to promote different recipes of municipali­ties,” said Iloilo provincial tourism officer Gilbert Marin.

As part of the Filipino Food Month celebratio­n, select municipali­ties were tapped to conduct cooking demonstrat­ions of their kakanin (rice cakes) and other delicacies.

Makers of baye- baye from the municipali­ty of Santa Barbara were invited for a cooking demonstrat­ion to spotlight their product. The town recently held a Baye-Baye Festival.

Baye-baye is made of ground young rice mixed with grated coconut.

The municipali­ty of Lambunao, on the other hand, demonstrat­ed how to cook coconut balls; binayabsan nga baboy which is similar to pork adobo but mixed with young guava leaves; and tinipgang nga lupo which is usually cooked with the indigenous vegetable lupo, egg and tomatoes.

Featured also were the town of Balasan’s kakanin and ginat-an nga taklong which is made of native snail cooked with grated coconut.

Guimbal’s lauya, a vegetable dish served during Holy Week, was highlighte­d, too, along with suman and sinakol.

“Our local kakanin have a long history. We have a lot of kakaninmak­ers whose recipes came from their parents and grandparen­ts,” Marin said.

He said some of the food could be existing in other provinces and

not just in Iloilo, so they wanted to find out what their similariti­es and difference­s are.

Some of the kakanin were part of the photo display, together with Slow Food Ark of Taste ingredient­s.

“Slow food is a movement that originated in Italy, with a focus on biodiversi­ty conservati­on and, of course, promoting endemic ingredient­s,” DOT regional director Cristine Mansinares said.

Aside from highlighti­ng the kakanin, they would like to raise awareness, too, on the need to preserve the region’s endemic ingredient­s to help bring back biodiversi­ty, she added.

Mansinares said they started

with the inventory of slow food last year, covering vegetable plants, root crops, legumes, and even seafood.

Among these were the Criollo cacao, a pure cacao variety brought by Spanish friars to the Philippine­s in the 1500s; the batuan fruit which is used as a souring agent; the kadios (a variety of legumes), and the darag chicken which is native to Panay Island.

Mansinares said these products unique to Western Visayas could be the region’s competitiv­e advantage over other places.

“We will consider this in our tree planting to promote species of trees, vegetables, and plants that are growing here,” she said. ( PNA/ PN)

 ?? ?? Food and ingredient­s indigenous to Western Visayas were featured in a recent photo display to mark Filipino Food Month.
Food and ingredient­s indigenous to Western Visayas were featured in a recent photo display to mark Filipino Food Month.

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