Now you may ask, what is Inday-Inday? It's another repetitive-feminine named native delicacy that is made from rice like its more popular sister - baye-baye.
While the latter is has its own original flavor and make, inday-inday is actually a combination of two well loved native delicacies - muasi (palitaw) and bukayo. But the muasi portion is not the the usual palitaw recipe for the it's more firm and gummy (I don't know the English term for kid-ol). Actually its more like a hardened kutsinta and this makes it more to my liking since I'm not really fond of muasi in the first place.
And its not quite easy to find inday-inday in the market today, though I've seen and tried it in Sabor Ilonggo stalls but their's is more like suman latik for the based is ibos-like. Ibos is malagkit rice boiled in gata which is called suman in Tagalog.
Despite the uncertainty for its nomenclature (I've read that inday-inday is just plain palitaw), one thing is sure - it wakes up the foodie in the Ilonggos who have gastronomic memories of this native delicacy called inday-inday.
Despite the uncertainty for its nomenclature (I've read that inday-inday is just plain palitaw), one thing is sure - it wakes up the foodie in the Ilonggos who have gastronomic memories of this native delicacy called inday-inday.