$12 Pork Vs. $715 Pork - YouTube

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[0]
- Alright, we are here in sunny Los Angeles,
[2]
^and we're gonna be doing an episode on pork.
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^- [Andrew] So we've done American barbecue pork ribs before.
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- Oh yeah, well today we're doing pork Filipino-style.
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I am so excited for Filipino food, let's go.
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Today on Worth It,
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we're gonna be trying three Filipino pork dishes
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at three drastically different price points
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to find out which one is the most worth it at it's price.
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I have quite the number of Filipino friends telling me
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make a Worth It episode around Filipino food.
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- Okay, humble brag.
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- 'Cause I have so many friends?
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- Yeah.
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- Oh no, I don't have that many friends.
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I just pretend like I do.
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I only have two friends and they're in this car.
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(laughing)
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- That's a good moment to introduce the fact
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that we have four people in the car.
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(laughing)
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- [Steven] That's Annie.
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- Cool, so.
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- The first place we're going to is called RiceBar.
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We're gonna eat with a friend, her name is Allie.
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She's Filipino, she loves pork.
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- Pork equals pig, is that correct?
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- Porky the Pig, that's right.
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Oh man, I just got sad.
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I imagined eating Porky the Pig.
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^(upbeat music)
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^- I'm Charles Olalia, chef, owner of RiceBar
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^here in downtown Los Angeles.
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- What type of establishment is RiceBar?
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- Everyday Filipino fair,
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something that you'd only find in homes,
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you know like the holy trinity of breakfast:
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garlic rice, which is essential to the Philippines,
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the egg, and a longanisa.
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So the pork longanisa, it's essential Filipino sausage.
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The one we make is from my region of Pampanga,
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but we've added a little bit of L.A. flair to it already,
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so it's a seven ounce sausage,
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more geared towards the appetite of how we eat over here.
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We start off with fresh ground pork.
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We don't ground the fat, we actually dice it.
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It gives better texture to the sausage.
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Strain out for two days, stuff it in a natural hog casing,
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and let it cure again for another three days.
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The garlic, the pepper, the sugar, the salt
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can really penetrate that meat
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and by the time we serve it to the guest,
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the flavors are way more robust.
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We cook it slowly on the griddle until it caramelizes
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so you have a beautiful glaze on the sausage.
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Then we pair that off in a garlic friend rice,
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and we make a very intense garlic oil,
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like a one-to-one ration of garlic to oil.
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We got our rice toasted and coat raw,
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then we put our garlic stock
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in a little bit of annatto water
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to give it the yellow color.
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You have all the flavor to the very inside of the grain.
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- [Andrew] So it's cooked in that garlic stock?
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- Yes, and then we pair that off with pickled papaya
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which rounds off the whole dish.
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^- [Steven] Wow, I want that one.
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^- Hello.
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^- Hi.
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^- This is Allie.
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^So you're Filipino.
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^(laughing)
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- Longanisa is something that I used to have growing up,
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usually at carnivals and fairs, that kind of thing.
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Or you would like have it for breakfast.
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- So this brings you back?
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- Yeah!
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Have you guys eaten Filipino-style before?
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You have the spoon in the right hand, fork in the left hand,
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and you shovel the food onto the spoon.
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Do you want to try it?
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- [Andrew] Yeah.
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- [Steven] Together!
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- [Allie] Okay, ready?
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- [All] Cheers.
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- It's got that sweetness to it, huh?
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(laughing)
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There's so many things going on with this sausage.
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Good texture, and then it's a little spice,
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and it's just like everything's nice.
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- [Andrew] I love sausage,
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sausage might be my single favorite food.
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- Why?
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- I grew up eating a lot of sausage.
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If you think about what is going on into making a sausage,
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it's crazy but also genius.
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Repackaging an animal into like
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a delicious little flavor missal.
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(laughing)
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- It's kinda gross, actually.
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- So this is the spicy vinegar that you--
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- Ooh, let's hit that up.
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- One of the major flavors
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of the Philippines, this sourness.
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And so that spicy vinegar goes well with everything.
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- Oh yeah.
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- Oh!
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(laughing)
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- Yeah, sweetness in the sausage with the spicy vinegar,
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that's it right there.
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- So this is like a perfect Filipino breakfast.
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Egg, rice, some kind of meat product.
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- I could get obsessed with the garlic rice.
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- It's so amazing.
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- Like, that alone, I would travel far and wide for it.
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- It's really good to have
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something like this in a restaurant,
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because I know growing up I only had it at home
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and I can like take my friends here,
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who have never had this before.
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- Are you ready, this is gonna be a big bite.
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(Allie laughing)
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- Whoa!
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^- What do you think?
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Adam just whispered it's really good.
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The quieter he says it, the more he means it.
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- The other dish we're gonna have
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is our house made spam, tocino.
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Tocino in the Philippines is kinda like our bacon.
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Again, diced fat, high in sugar, very simple.
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We cook 'em in a spam can in a water bath,
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let that rest for about three days.
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Then we slice it off,
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brulee it with a little bit of sugar
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so we get the nice caramelization.
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We're gonna pair that off with black rice,
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an heirloom variety from south of the Philippines,
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very high in anthocyanins,
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just like with blueberries and spinach.
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^Some pickled radishes, and some choi.
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- [Steven] Okay!
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- That is beautiful.
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- [Andrew] Yeah.
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- It's got color, texture,
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God, there's nothing I loved more than spam as a kid.
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- [All] Cheers.
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(Steven groans)
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- Hot damn.
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- Mhm, oh damn.
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- [Allie] That is so good.
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- The rice is like seriously blowing me away.
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^Why does it almost taste cocoa-y to me?
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- [Steven] Very delicious,
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and with all these other ingredients in there, look at that!
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- [Allie] It looks like a vegetable garden.
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- If only spam could grow from the ground.
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- On trees.
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- Thank you so much for joining us!
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- You're very welcome!
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^- Thank you for having us.
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- I think family style is pretty much
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the only way to eat if you're Filipino
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because so much of the food
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is about community and about family.
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- Would you even say that we're family?
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- You and I?
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- I mean, the three of us, yeah.
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- Oh.
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(laughing)
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We're something.
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(laughing)
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- RiceBar, what a treat.
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Before we go into our pork fact,
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^we're gonna be hitting up Jollibee
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^for a quick halo-halo break.
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^- [Andrew] Oh look, there's the bee.
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^- [Steven] Bee's got a big bosom.
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- Do you know what bosom is?
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- Isn't it your butt?
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- No, it's a women's chest area.
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(laughing)
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- I did not know that.
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(upbeat music)
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- Wild!
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I like this whole cake on top.
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(Steven moans)
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- Pork fact!
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^Only about 30% of pork in consumed fresh,
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^the rest is cured or smoked
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^and eaten as bacon, ham, and sausage.
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- Bacon, ham, sausage, that's a pretty strong
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team of foods right there.
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- Right, they should be holding the ball, playing the games.
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- Holding the pigskin.
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- Boom!
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- We're gonna stop at a place called LASA,
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get some thick cut pork belly!
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I've been told that I don't
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^have the voice of a radio person.
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(Steven inhales)
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- Roasted.
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^(upbeat music)
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^- I'm chef Chad Valencia, co-owner of LASA.
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We're a seasonal, Filipino-inspired restaurant
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here in Chinatown, L.A.
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- From my understanding, lasa in Tagalog is flavor?
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- Flavor or taste.
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- Can you talk about what that means for you guys?
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- It's based on our life experiences,
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so this is not traditional Filipino food by any means.
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My brother and I come from California restaurants,
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so we follow the seasons.
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What's popping at the market is gonna dictate
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what ingredients are gonna get used.
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We'll think what can coincide with Filipino dishes
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but isn't that specific ingredient.
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For instance, in springtime,
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there's a sour soup called sinigang.
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We use rhubarb to sour the broth.
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That's not traditional by any means,
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but if any Filipino were to taste that broth,
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they would know is sinigang.
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- And you're using rhubarb
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'cause that's what you have here in California?
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- Exactly.
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We're gonna eat our twice-cooked pork belly.
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It's based on a Filipino dish called kalabasa ginataan,
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which means squash stewed in coconut.
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There's always the addition
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of pork product and shrimp product
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in a lot of vegetable dishes in the Philippines,
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so we've flipped it on it's head
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and turned it into an entree.
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We take skin-on, boneless pork belly slabs
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and slowly render on a plancha
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so that the skin ends up crispy.
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We stew the kabocha squash in coconut milk
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until it's extremely tender,
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and then we puree it.
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And then we lock roast Chinese long beans,
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and then we take mustard greens
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and we dress that in butter and vinegar.
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So we have this fresh salad
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to kinda cut through the richness of the belly
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and even the kabocha and coconut.
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People are always quick to say
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oh, you guys are doing Filipino-fusion.
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Filipino food is already fusion
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by a way of China, Spain, America.
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We're not doing anything that different,
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^we're just doing California Filipino food.
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^- [Steven] Let's try it.
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^- [Andrew] Yeah, I'm ready to eat.
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^- Green mango soda, cheers.
[459]
- Oh, gentle bubbles.
[462]
Sodas are better when the bubbles are gentle.
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- Agreed, let's eat.
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- I'm gonna do a little puree taste-test solo mode
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before I get into this.
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- Alright.
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- Cheers.
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Whoa!
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- It's almost like pumpkin pie.
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- At first I was like, okay this is squash.
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And then there's this whole other flavors
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that run across your mouth.
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- Okay so here we got a thick cut pork belly.
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(laughing)
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it's like a steak of pork!
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- [Andrew] Imma do a little squash.
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- Yes, I'm going long beans, too.
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Cheers!
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(calm music)
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(Steven moaning)
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- The hard exterior of this pork belly,
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(tapping)
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very satisfying.
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(food crunching)
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And that.
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- [Steven] Crunch!
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- How fun is that?
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- It's all about into the--
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- The bellies of things, you know?
[509]
- Yeah.
[510]
- Of the beast.
[511]
- Of The Rock.
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- [Andrew] The Rock?
[513]
- Yeah you know, The Rock like his abs.
[514]
- Oh, yeah, sure.
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- Yeah, he's got a nice belly.
[517]
We share a lot of dishes on this show.
[518]
- Uh huh.
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- And we're often times like huddled over one small plate.
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- Uh huh.
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- Like nibbling away, this was created to be shared.
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- That's right.
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- Big thick cut pork belly.
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(laughing)
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Right in the middle, on a huge plate.
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Hey, come over here.
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Family style. - Family boy.
[534]
- You wanna double down?
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- Double down!
[539]
- Ugh, why'd you do that so slowly?
[541]
Hold out your hand, and I'm gonna fly the camera into it.
[544]
(whooshing)
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- We're cool.
[549]
(laughing)
[550]
Plot twist!
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We're in New York City, whoo!
[555]
And we're here because this
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is a very special dish that we're gonna try.
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In fact, it's not even a dish, it is a feast.
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But before we get there.
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- I know what's happening.
[562]
- Oh, we all know what's happening.
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- It's no longer a surprise.
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- That guy knows what's happening.
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- Pork fact!
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- Ow!
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^Hundreds of years ago, all pork was referred to as bacoun,
[570]
^or as it was spelled back then, bacoun?
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B-A-C-O-U-N.
[575]
- Yeah, you have to spell it!
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^- It comes from the old teutonic, backe,
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^that referred to the back of the hog.
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^- Bacon, bacoun.
[583]
- How's that for a fact?
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- Borderline factual.
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(laughs)
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Pretty good, it's pretty good.
[588]
- Pretty good, thank you, thank you very much.
[590]
We're going to a restaurant called Jeepney.
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They serve what's called a kamayan feast.
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In the middle of it, we're gonna have a whole pig, stuffed.
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- Ooh.
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(tropical music)
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^- My name's Nicole Ponseca,
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^and we're at Jeepney here in the East Village.
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You're gonna eat Nueva York style lechon,
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and we're also gonna do a kamayan feast.
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- [Steven] What is kamayan?
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- Kamayan is basically to eat with your hands.
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We lay out all the food on banana leaves very beautifully,
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because we know that we eat with our eyes first.
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But it wasn't really like that for me growing up.
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Kamayan was just my dad in the kitchen,
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eating on a plate just with our hands,
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like really simple, really humble.
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My whole mission is how can I help spread Filipino food,
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but also how can I take anything
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that I was ever embarrassed or ashamed about
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and make it into something that I'm really proud about.
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So we decided to do it this beautiful way
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of introducing Filipino food in culture,
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and Chef Miguel's gonna tell you
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about the dishes that we're having today.
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^- For this particular kamayan,
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^we created a special feast for you guys.
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We have some dinuguan, some banana ribs,
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dampa fry, which is our marinated whole red snapper.
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Let's not forget about the chicken adobo,
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considered the national dish of the Philippines .
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Then you have the star of the show, our whole lechon.
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- [Steven] What is lechon, can you kinda walk us into that?
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- [Miguel] Lechon is a whole pig.
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Traditionally, we would be roasting it
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over an open fire pit.
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We are in the East Village,
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we would probably get our asses busted
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for doing something like that.
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So we cook our lechon in the oven.
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We're gonna stuff it with lemongrass, onion, salt, pepper,
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and a shit load of love and longanisa,
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bring that temperature up to 500
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just to crisp that skin and sear everything,
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so we want to trap all those juices in there,
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then we lower that temperature and let it roast slowly
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so that when you guys get it and crack open that skin,
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that meat is just falling off the bone.
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The pig that you guys will be having today
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is about 22 pounds, so.
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(laughing)
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You guys better be hungry.
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- We are extremely hungry.
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Also we're bringing in backup,
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what 10 friends, you think that's enough people?
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- [Miguel] I think 10 friends is a good number.
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- Thank you all to our friends for joining us today.
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I just wanna raise a toast to all y'all for coming out.
[712]
Cheers guy!
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- [All] Cheers!
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- Oh, we have some hot towels coming.
[717]
(all cheering)
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Okay!
[722]
^- A common phrase we use for cheers is tagay,
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T-A-G-A-Y, tagay.
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- [All] Tagay!
[728]
(calming music)
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(laughing)
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- Yeah, feeling it?
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- I'm ready to eat with my hands.
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- I'm gonna teach you all how to do kamayan.
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You make a little rice ball,
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keep it here in the front fingers.
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- And then you push it into your mouth with you thumb.
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- [Nicole] Yeah.
[747]
- Oh!
[748]
- My aunt used to eat like this all the time,
[750]
but I would refuse because I was a bratty little kid.
[753]
(laughing)
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But now, I wish I had paid attention
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because I don't know what I'm doing!
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- [All] Cheers!
[760]
- It's a good sausage.
[761]
- That tastes like home.
[762]
- Do you want to cut into the lechon, is that cool?
[765]
(shouting and laughing)
[767]
Sorry!
[768]
- Nah, that's my fault.
[768]
I'm wanna hand this to Andrew,
[769]
he's usually the one who handles that.
[772]
- [Nicole] Yeah.
[775]
- [All] Oh!
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- [Steven] Look at that steam popping out!
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- There's sausages in there.
[787]
- Oh my gosh!
[792]
(all chatting)
[801]
Why's it so important, the eating with your hands aspect?
[803]
- It's a way of respecting what you're eating,
[805]
and also interacting with other people at the table
[807]
to catch up on what's going on in your life, you know,
[810]
this very intimate moment, vulnerable moment
[812]
of eating with your hands.
[813]
- I believe Brenda wanted some ear.
[815]
Do a little quick taste test here.
[817]
- [All] Oh!
[819]
- [Man] Brenda, you monster!
[821]
- Not as strong, oh!
[823]
That's more than just ear.
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- [Woman] Andrew.
[826]
- It's like a fortune cookie.
[827]
(food crunching)
[829]
(Andrew moaning)
[833]
- It tastes like a fine bag of that pork you bought.
[835]
- [Steven] Mm, mhm!
[837]
- The cartilage is almost like glass.
[839]
It's like rock candy.
[841]
- Exactly.
[841]
- Yeah.
[842]
- A salty, delicious.
[843]
- It's so intense!
[844]
- Like you're eating the wisdom of the universe right now.
[846]
You would never know the kind of gossip this pig hears.
[849]
(all laughing)
[851]
- There's a lot happening on this table.
[853]
- (bleep) yeah.
[854]
- Do you think that there is a single bite
[855]
that you personally find the most delicious?
[858]
- Yeah, for me (laughing)
[860]
I'm gonna go straight for the cheek on that pig.
[862]
- [Steven] Oh man.
[863]
- [All] Oh!
[866]
^- [Andrew] It's so fatty.
[869]
(laughing)
[872]
Here, I'll let you have that.
[874]
(tropical music)
[876]
- It's like eating a, you know, melted butter.
[879]
That's what it feels like.
[880]
- The cheek meat is insane.
[882]
- Alright, give me some.
[883]
(all shouting)
[890]
- Wow.
[891]
- That's delicious!
[892]
(laughing)
[893]
It's so fatty!
[894]
- [Andrew] Wait, I don't know where it went.
[894]
I just swallowed it.
[895]
- [Miguel] Second dish, adobo dilaw.
[897]
First we take the chicken
[898]
and we poach it for about three minutes,
[899]
just to tighten that skin so when we pan sear it,
[902]
that skin isn't falling apart or breaking.
[904]
We put it in the pot with garlic, and bay leaf,
[907]
vinegar, soy, and tumeric,
[908]
and let that cook until it's nice and tender.
[910]
Take that later, and we're gonna finish it off
[912]
by putting it under salamander,
[914]
getting that skin nice and crispy.
[916]
And we'll finish it off with the sauce.
[917]
- [Andrew] Okay, so I think everybody should try the adobo.
[920]
- The national dish of the Philippines.
[922]
(upbeat music)
[924]
- Chicken cheers.
[925]
- Chicken cheers!
[926]
- That part's good.
[927]
(Steven groaning)
[931]
- That's so soft!
[932]
- This is the best chicken I've ever had, honestly.
[935]
- Oh my God, the parade of meats is insane in this dinner.
[940]
- So the other hidden gem of this meal is the dinuguan.
[944]
- [Miguel] It's a pork blood stew,
[945]
one of my favorite dishes.
[946]
We take pork butt, which we marinate
[948]
in salt, pepper, garlic, and vinegar.
[951]
It's gonna permeate through the meat
[952]
and it's gonna make it more flavorful.
[954]
We let it sit overnight, sear it off in a cast iron,
[956]
place that in our brazing pan,
[958]
take some aromatics, onions and garlic,
[960]
along with pork broth.
[961]
Cook until it's nice and soft,
[962]
and then we'll be adding the blood once it comes out.
[965]
It thickens, it becomes this rich, chocolate color,
[967]
and that's ready for serving.
[968]
- It's right in front of you, if you see it right here.
[970]
It's blood stew.
[971]
Cheers guys.
[972]
- [Andrew And Allie] Cheers.
[976]
- [Andrew] Oh man.
[977]
- It's almost smokey, it's very rich.
[979]
- It's almost like minerally,
[980]
so even though it's likes really rich and deep,
[982]
the minerality kind of cuts it a little bit.
[984]
- It's crazy the range of pork flavors that you get here.
[987]
Sweet longanisa and the really fatty lechon,
[991]
but you also have this really deep stew.
[994]
- I just wanna say thank you everybody
[996]
for joining us for this awesome meal.
[998]
(cheering)
[1001]
Is there anything else you wanna say
[1002]
past the Filipino food?
[1005]
- (foreign language) Just, let's eat.
[1008]
- Let's eat, cheers guys.
[1011]
- [All] Cheers!
[1011]
- Goodnight!
[1014]
(chanting Adam)
[1019]
(upbeat music)
[1026]
- [Allie] Yeah?
[1027]
^- Pretty good, right?
[1030]
^Cool.
[1031]
- This is hard, but I'm gonna ask you,
[1033]
and I expect an answer
[1034]
because that's what we do on this show.
[1036]
Which Filipino pork dish
[1037]
was the most worth it to you at it's price?
[1039]
- Every place was the perfect thing in it's category.
[1043]
LASA would be my perfect date-night meal.
[1045]
RiceBar is the ultimate fill-you-up-good snack.
[1049]
And Jeepney is just the perfect celebration meal.
[1052]
Choosing between them is just like--
[1053]
- I could tell you mine.
[1054]
- What kind of day are you gonna, okay,
[1055]
^- [Steven] RiceBar.
[1056]
^- [Andrew] Oh (beep).
[1057]
^- I loved that restaurant feeling
[1058]
^that you could be family with strangers there.
[1060]
Ugh, it's so hard, but that's, yeah, yup.
[1063]
- Yeah.
[1064]
- Your turn!
[1064]
^- I think Jeepney's slightly edges it out for me.
[1067]
^The format of the meal is so fun
[1069]
^that you're guaranteed a memorable meal.
[1071]
Something about eating with your hands,
[1073]
shoulder to shoulder with people.
[1074]
- This is hard, this hurts.
[1077]
LASA, no way-sa! - Adam chooses LASA.
[1080]
- Three way split.
[1081]
- I think I have a crush on Filipino cuisine.
[1084]
It's stuck in my mind, sweet meat with a vinegar touch,
[1089]
like I just want more.
[1090]
- [Steven] You wake up thinking about it.
[1091]
- [Andrew] You go to sleep tasting it in your belches.
[1093]
- [Steven] Oh yes!