Courtesy Adobo Connection
Mexican in origin, adobo is a ubiquitous dish in every household in the Philippines. It's one of 50 classic dishes we think define Filipino cuisine. Tweet or Instagram your favorites tagged #CNNFood
Candice Lopez-Quimpo
This marinated grilled chicken goes with a generous serving of garlic rice.
Candice Lopez-Quimpo
Made from Batangas beef, the broth is rich with flavors while the bones are big -- meaning more bone marrow to enjoy.
Candice Lopez-Quimpo
This medley of okra, eggplant, bitter gourd, squash, tomatoes and bagoong (shrimp or fish paste) is a healthy and easy-to-make dish.
Candice Lopez-Quimpo
In Lucban, Quezon, pancit habhab is served on a banana leaf and slurped.
Candice Lopez-Quimpo
A delicate egg wrapper contains a savory filling of ubod (the pith of the coconut tree), shrimps, pork, onions and a garlicky sweet sauce.
Candice Lopez-Quimpo
Made from fresh carabao milk and sugar, this sweet confection is stirred until thick and melts in the mouth.
Candice Lopez-Quimpo
This fiery chili, pork and coconut milk stew is a perfect for anyone who loves coconut and spicy food.
Candice Lopez-Quimpo
This Filipino-style barbecue using pork belly creates juicy, flavorsome meat inside and crackling skin outside.
Candice Lopez-Quimpo
The ube or purple yam is a popular ingredient used for desserts and here it's made into a sweet and smooth jam.
Candice Lopez-Quimpo
This deep-fried shrimp dish is typically served with a tomato-based sweet and sour sauce.
Candice Lopez-Quimpo
Fresh snails cooked in coconut milk and leafy vegetables are served in the shell, while a tiny fork (or toothpick) is used to loosen the meat inside.
Candice Lopez-Quimpo
Tsokolate, or thick Filipino hot chocolate, pairs perfectly with sugar-topped cheesebread.
Candice Lopez-Quimpo
The egg and milk-based custard capped off with glistening caramelized sugar is a popular dessert among locals.

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CNN  — 

Filipino food may not be as famous as that of its Thai and Vietnamese neighbors.

But with more than 7,000 islands and a colorful history, this archipelago has some delicious dishes of its own.

Blessed with an abundance of seafood, tropical fruits and creative cooks, there’s more to Filipino food than the mind-boggling balut (duck embryo).

You just have to know where to find them and how to eat them.

1. Adobo

No list of Filipino food would be complete without adobo.

A ubiquitous dish in every household in the Philippines, it’s Mexican in origin.

But Filipinos found that cooking meat (often chicken and pork) in vinegar, salt, garlic, pepper, soy sauce and other spices was a practical way to preserve it without refrigeration.

This cooking style can be applied to different meats or even seafood.

It’s best sampled in a Filipino home, but the garlicky version of the lamb adobo can be found at Abe restaurant in Taguig.

2. Lechon

The lechon is the most invited party guest in the Philippines.

The entire pig is spit-roasted over coals, with the crisp, golden-brown skin served with liver sauce, the most coveted part.

In Cebu, the stomach of the pig is stuffed with star anise, pepper, spring onions, laurel leaves and lemongrass resulting in an extremely tasty lechon, which needs no sauce.

In Manila, folks can get their piggy from Elar’s Lechon, while in Cebu, the best is CnT Lechon.

3. Sisig

Candice Lopez-Quimpo

Nothing goes to waste in Filipino food.

In the culinary capital of Pampanga, they turn the pork’s cheeks, head and liver into a sizzling dish called Sisig.

The crunchy and chewy texture of this appetizer is a perfect match for a cold beer.

Serve with hot sauce and Knorr seasoning to suit the preference of you and your buddies.

Credit goes to Aling Lucing, who invented this dish at a humble stall along the train railways in Angeles City, Pampanga.

While Sisig can be found in many restaurants, try the original version at Aling Lucing Sisig.

4. Crispy pata

Not for the easily spooked, this pork knuckle is simmered, drained and deep fried until crisp.

The meat is tender and juicy inside, with a crisp, crackling exterior.

Served with vinegar, soy sauce and chili.

5. Chicken inasal

Yes, it’s grilled chicken.

But in Bacolod, this is no ordinary grilled chicken.

The meat is marinated in lemongrass, calamansi, salt, pepper and garlic and brushed with achuete (annatto seeds) oil.

Every part of the chicken is grilled here from the paa (drumstick), pecho (breast), baticulon (gizzard), atay (liver), pakpak (wings) and corazon (heart).

It must be eaten with a generous serving of garlic rice, with some of the orange oil used to marinade the chicken poured over the rice.

You can go chicken crazy at Manokan Country where there is a row of authentic Inasal restaurants.

MORE: How to cook like Asia’s best female chef

6. Taba ng talangka

The fat of a small variety of crabs are pressed and sauteed in garlic.

This cholesterol-laden Filipino food is often used as a sauce for prawns or eaten with fried fish and rice.

The best taba ng talangka comes from the provinces of Pampanga, Tarlac and Bulacan.

It’s worth buying a bottle or two from the markets there, or pasalubong shops like Bulacan Sweets.

Bulacan Sweets, 155 N.S. Amoranto Ave., Quezon City, Metro Manila; +63 2 740 2171

7. Pancit Palabok

When Filipinos have guests, they don’t skimp.

The pancit palabok served on most birthday parties oozes with flavors and textures.

The noodle dish is layered with rice noodles, a rich orange sauce made from shrimp broth, pork, hard boiled eggs, shrimps, chicharon (pork rinds) and sometimes oysters and squid

8. Bulalo

Despite the perennial heat, Filipinos often enjoy sipping piping hot bulalo soup made with from freshly slaughtered Batangas beef.

The broth is rich with flavors seeped from the beef after boiling for hours.

The bones are big, meaning more bone marrow to enjoy.

In Santo Tomas, Batangas, there’s a row of restaurants along the highway serving bulalo.

9. Arroz Caldo

Candice Lopez-Quimpo

While chicken soup soothes sick Westerners, Filipinos turn to arroz caldo, a thick chicken rice porridge.

Cooked with ginger and sometimes garnished with a hard-boiled egg, toasted garlic and green onions, this Filipino food is sold in street-side stalls.

If dining al fresco doesn’t suit, there’s the Via Mare outlets around Manila.

10. Fish tinola

The freshness of Cebu’s rich marine life can be tasted in its fish tinola.

The simple sour broth is flavored with onions, tomatoes and sambag (tamarind) and cooked over coco-lumber firewood for hours.

Cebuanos know to go to A-One, a small hole in the wall known, cooking up to 200 kilos of fish daily.

A-One, Rd. North 6, North Reclamation, Cebu City

11. Kare-kare

This stew of oxtail has the most delicious sauce made from ground toasted rice and crushed peanuts.

Banana blossom, eggplants and string beans add more interesting textures, making it a complete meal on its own.

It’s eaten with steamed rice and bagoong (shrimp paste).

While mom’s kare-kare is always best, the version at Cafe Juanita is authentic.

12. Kamaro

Serious gourmands know the best cooks come from Pampanga.

So do kamaro, these mole crickets they cook into a delicious appetizer.

What makes this delicacy special?

Well, if catching these bugs is tough, so is cooking them.

Legs and wings must be removed, then the body is boiled in vinegar and garlic.

It’s then sautéed in oil, onion and chopped tomatoes until they turn chocolate brown.

These bite-size appetizers are crunchy on the outside and moist on the inside.

Sample Kamaru at Everybody’s Cafe, an authentic Pampango dining institution for many decades now.

13. Ilocos empanada

Yes, its name reveals its Spanish origins.

But its ingredients are all local.

Grated unripe papaya or bean sprouts, egg and loganiza (pork sausage) are stuffed in the empanada and deep fried, accompanied with a spicy vinegar sauce.

Get this staple Filipino food from stalls beside the cathedrals in Vigan and Laoag.

14. Sinigang

Sinigang is a stew of fish, prawns, pork or beef soured by fruits like tamarind, kamias or tomatoes.

Often accompanied by vegetables like kangkong, string beans and taro, this stew is eaten with rice.

A modern, but delicious spin on Sinigang is Sentro 1771’s version called Sinigang Corned Beef.

15. Tapa

Filipinos are huge rice eaters, and breakfast is no exception.

A tap-si-log consists of thin slices of dried marinated beef served with fried egg and garlic rice.

While it is breakfast fare, it’s also a quick, satisfying meal you can eat anytime and available in most places.

Making it accessible all the time and even available for deliveries, Tapa King serves it in the classic, sweetish and spicy versions.

16. Dinuguan at puto

It may not look appetizing.

But this black dish of pork and pig innards – stewed in fresh pig blood seasoned with garlic, onion and oregano and eaten with a white puto (rice cake) or steamed rice – is a comforting dish for many Filipinos.

The MilkyWay Cafe’s version tastes homemade and clean.

17. Betute

The French may have turned frogs’ legs into a delicacy, but Filipinos take it to the next level.

They get a frog, stuff it with minced pork and deep-fry it.

While betute isn’t for everyone, the adventurous can try it at Everybody’s Cafe.

18. Laing

Candice Lopez-Quimpo

This dish of taro leaves cooked in rich coconut milk is an everyday staple in Bicol.

Morsels of meat and chili are added to give punch to the Laing.

It’s eaten with steamed rice.

The authentic versions from kitchens in Naga and Albay are most delicious.

In Manila, it can be found at Dencio’s.

19. Pinakbet

Up north in Ilocos, the vegetable dish of okra, eggplant, bitter gourd, squash, tomatoes and bagoong (shrimp or fish paste) called pinakbet is a favorite.

And now, this healthy, cheap, and easy to cook dish has made its way around the archipelago.

It is cooked in most households and local restaurants.

Try it at Max’s Fried Chicken in Manila.

20. Sinugno

Cooking with coconut milk is common in the province of Quezon, south of Manila.

Freshwater tilapia fish is grilled then simmered in coconut milk and chili.

It’s definitely freshest when eaten close to the fishponds as they do in Kamayan Sa Palaisdaan.

21. Bagnet

The lechon kawali, the deep fried pork, is a popular Filipino food all over the country.

Meanwhile, bagnet, a siimlar dish from the northern province of Ilocos, is coveted for its irresistible crunchy skin dipped in the sweet-sour vinegar sukang Iloko.

Buy it from the markets of Ilocos, or try it at Cafe Juanita.

22. Pancit habhab

Trust Filipino ingenuity to adapt noodles to their lifestyle.

In Lucban, Quezon, pancit habhab is served on a banana leaf and slurped.

Garnished with carrots, chayote, and a few pieces of meat, this cheap noodle dish is most often eaten by students and jeepney drivers on the go.

For an extra special version, there’s the Old Center Panciteria which has been making the noodles since 1937. Cooks there add lechon, a generous serving of vegetables, and even hand you a fork.

Old Center Panciteria, 85 San Luis St. Lucban, Quezon; +63 42 540 3068

MORE: Manila’s world street food festival

23. Pork barbecue

In a country where almost everything is marinated, skewered and grilled in the street corners, everyone has their favorite barbecue meat.

Pork is the most popular.

Cebu is known for barbecue stalls along Larsian Street just off Fuente Osmena Circle.

Manila residents are addicted to that from Ineng’s, which has many outlets in Metro Manila, for its big, chunky pieces of pork with a perfect, salty-sweet marinade.

Ineng’s, Dela Rosa Car Park, Dela Rosa Street, Legaspi Village, Makati City, Metro Manila

24. Longaniza

Every province has their version of the pork sausage called longaniza.

It varies from sweet to garlicky to spicy.

Usually eaten for breakfast with garlic rice, fried egg and a dipping sauce of vinegar.

Zoricho, 118 Silver City, Frontera Verde, Ugong, Pasig City, Metro Manila; +63 2 571 3269

25. Lumpiang ubod

The fruit, leaves and even the pith of the coconut tree is used in Filipino food.

The pith makes a sweet and tender filling for the fresh lumpia, our version of the spring roll.

A delicate egg wrapper contains a savory filling of ubod (the pith of the coconut tree), shrimps, pork, onions and a garlicky sweet sauce.

Bacolod city is known for its petite version of this spring roll.

Bailon Homemade Ilonggo Delicacies, 1115 Rodriguez Ave., Bangkal, Makati; +63 2 843 6673

26. Bicol express

A fitting tribute to people who love coconut and spicy food is bicol express, a fiery chili, pork and coconut milk stew.

It can be tried at the hole-in-the-wall eatery called Top Haus in Makati.

Top Haus, 5994 J.D. Villena St., corner Mabini Street, Poblacion, Makati

27. Relyenong alimango

Filipino cooks are never fazed by fuzzy food preparations like relyenong alimango.

The crab is delicately peeled then sauteed with onions, tomatoes, herbs and stuffed back into the crab shell, then deep fried.

Chicken or bangus (milkfish) are also cooked relyeno.

Often cooked in homes for fiestas, but enterprising housewives sell them at the Sunday market in Quezon City (Centris Mall, Edsa, Quezon City) or the Saturday market in Makati (Salcedo Village, Makati).

28. Balut

No trip to the Philippines would be complete without sampling its famous balut.

Vendors peddling these eggs on the street chant “Baluuuuut!” to entice buyers.

This 17-day-old duck embryo is boiled, served with rock salt or spicy vinegar and is often consumed with beer.

29. Inihaw na panga ng tuna

General Santos and Davao City are known for their numerous ways with tuna.

The panga or jaw is often grilled over coals and dipped in sauce of soy sauce, vinegar, chili and calamansi (local lemon).

30. Fish kinilaw

The day’s fresh catch is dressed in palm coconut vinegar, ginger, chili and spices.

Each province has its own way of preparing kinilaw.

Most wet markets will prepare this for you.

Most popular in Cebu is to eat it in Su-tu-kil, the row of seafood eateries (Lapu-LapuCity, Mactan,Cebu).

31. Kuhol sa gata

Fresh snails cooked in coconut milk and leafy vegetables.

The snails are served in the shell and a tiny fork (or toothpick) is used to loosen the meat inside.

This is usually served as an appetizer or a snack, but it works well with hot rice.

32. Sinanglay

Fresh tilapia is first stuffed with tomatoes and onions.

Then simmered in coconut milk and wrapped in pechay leaves (similar to bokchoy), which helps keep the fish together and adds a peppery taste.

It’s a staple Filipino food.

33. Inihaw na Liempo

Candice Lopez-Quimpo

A Filipino-style barbecue using a popular pork part: liempo (pork belly).

Arguably, the best is Cebuano style – a slab of liempo stuffed with herbs and spices and roasted.

The result is juicy flavorsome meat inside and crackling skin outside.

34. Empanada de kaliskis

The literal translation of these words is scaly pie.

A traditional meat pie from Malolos, it is a flaky, croissant-like pastry filled with chicken and deep fried.

Best freshly made, get it when in Malolos or from a reputable restaurant such as Adarna Food and Culture.

35. Tinolang tugac

Frog isn’t common in Manila.

But a few miles away in Pampanga you’ll see it stuffed or stewed.

Or simply taking the place of chicken, such as in the common tinola – a ginger-based soup usually cooked with chunks of green papaya and chili pepper leaves.

36. Camaro rebosado

Shrimp coated in egg and flour batter and deep fried.

Served with a tomato-based sweet and sour sauce for dipping.

37. Bibingka

For many Filipinos, Christmas is marked by the scent of bibingkas cooking at dawn.

These rice cakes are made by soaking the rice overnight, grinding it with a mortar stone and mixing in coconut milk and sugar.

Laborious.

The batter is poured into clay pots with banana leaves, with coals on top and below.

It’s garnished with salted eggs, kesong puti (white cheese made from Carabao’s milk) and slathered with butter, sugar and grated coconut.

Best eaten hot from weekend markets.

The best one is from Aling Linda at the Sidcor Sunday Market at Centris Mall, Edsa, Quezon City.

For the rest of the week, there’s Via Mare or Ferino’s Bibingka with branches all over Metro Manila.

38. Suman at manga

Sold along the roadside, suman are sticky rice snacks steamed in banana or coconut leaves.

There are many versions of suman, depending on the ingredients and leaves used.

These Filipino food snacks are often paired with sweet ripe mangoes.

They’re cheap snacks, which travel well.

They can be bought from roadside stalls, or enterprising vendors peddling them on buses.

39. Champorado

When the rains start pouring and classes are suspended, children love this comforting breakfast – a chocolate rice porridge.

It’s hot, rich and filling.

To offset the sweetness it’s often served with dried fish.

This breakfast of champs can be eaten in roadside carinderias or there’s the triple chocolate version at Max’s Fried Chicken in various cities.

40. Halo-halo

Many people joke that the Philippines has two seasons: hot and hotter.

Cool off with some halo-halo.

In Manila, MilkyWay Cafe offers the best halo-halo with finely shaved ice and a generous serving of leche flan, gulaman, ube, banana, kaong, beans and garbanzos, milk and a scoop of ube ice cream.

41. Buco pie

Go loco over coconut.

In the province of Laguna, buco pie (young coconut pie) wars are hot.

Each claims to be the best.

Orient D’ Original may have a tacky name but this pie shop has been a favorite for 45 years.

They serve the pie hot, with a delicious filling with generous layers of tender coconut meat.

Orient D’ Original, National Highway, Los Banos, Laguna, +63 4 9536 3783

42. Ensaymada at tsokolate

Ensaymada is a handmade cheesebread topped with sugar and cheese, and best served with thick Filipino hot chocolate.

Mary Grace cafe serves this unbeatable combination popular for breakfast or an afternoon snack.

43. Pastillas de leche

Made from fresh carabao milk and sugar, this sweet confection is stirred until thick and melts in the mouth.

Each piece is double wrapped in paper.

Traditionally, in the province of Bulacan, they hand cut ornate designs for the wrapper.

A consistent source of all things pastillas is Bulacan Sweets with more than 40 years of experience in making these sweets.

Bulacan Sweets, 155 N.S. Amoranto Ave., Quezon City, Metro Manila; +63 2 740 2171

44. Puto bumbong

Candice Lopez-Quimpo

These may look like miniature chimneys along the roadside stalls, but that’s what gives the chewy purple snacks their name.

Traditionally, purple mountain rice was used to make these, steamed in bamboo tubes, then served with butter, panocha (brown concentrated sugar) and grated coconut.

The Via Mare chain has been consistently producing chewy snack for years.

45. Turon

This fried banana with langka (jackfruit) all sealed in a lumpia wrapper is our version of a sweet spring roll.

It is peddled around the cities and towns for the perfect merienda (mid-morning or afternoon snack).

46. Pan de sal

Pan de sal are small oval buns often eaten by Filipinos for breakfast. A brownish crust conceals a soft and fluffy inside. The best pan de sal is baked in an oven using firewood, naturally infusing the wood flavor into the bread.

Everyone has their favorite bakery, but Pan de Manila with outlets all over Metro Manila is consistently delicious.

47. Taho

Brown sugar syrup is stirred into warm soybean custard and topped with sago pearls.

Traditionally sold by vendors walking the streets calling out to those at home, but can also be sourced from supermarkets and restaurants.

48. Tablea tsokolate

A customary hot chocolate drink that stems from Spanish colonial times, tablea tsokolate is made from tablea de cacao – bittersweet, thick flat chocolate disks.

The traditional version is available at Adarna Food and Culture.

49. Halayang ube

The ube or purple yam is a popular ingredient used for desserts and here it’s made into a sweet halayang ube (ube jam).

For decades the nuns of the Good Shepherd Convent in Tagaytay have been producing this jam.

Their product is smooth and creamy, and helps provide a livelihood to the single mothers who make them.

50. Leche flan

This is a popular dessert among locals – an egg and milk-based custard capped off with glistening caramelized sugar.

Originally published March 2012, updated May 2016