A mouth-watering combo that it makes me salivate even by just looking at this picture anytime of the day - and it's past 2AM now.
Grilled or fried meat or seafood plus a tasty vegetable side dish is always a gastronomic winner. And this early, I scream for extra rice, please!
Apan-apan is the local Ilonggo term for a simple dish made with kangkong basically cooked adobo-style but with additional guinamos (the local bago-ong).
It is a side dish but with it being so flavourful, it could easily outdo any dish it is paired with.
I just love squeezing some calamansi over my apan-apan to add some tanginess and making it more appetizing. CLICK FOR RECIPE
There are a hundred and one ways of making sinugba or inihaw na baboy - or even thousand. It may differ in the marinade, cooking process and others.
But for the simplest and still my all time favorite is just rubbing salt to fresh pork (and maybe some calamansi) and then grill.
The salt brings out the tasty juices of the pork and sinfully as it may seem, who can resist those pork fat and skin oozing with its natural oil!
So that's why, i just love dipping it in vinegar or, you guess it right, calamansi. And if there are some sili or hot peppers, bring it on! Extra rice, please!
But for the simplest and still my all time favorite is just rubbing salt to fresh pork (and maybe some calamansi) and then grill.
The salt brings out the tasty juices of the pork and sinfully as it may seem, who can resist those pork fat and skin oozing with its natural oil!
So that's why, i just love dipping it in vinegar or, you guess it right, calamansi. And if there are some sili or hot peppers, bring it on! Extra rice, please!