I love how the girls described the carne guisada as tasting like either menudo or kaldereta, thus fueling the never ending debate on what really makes the difference between menudo, kaldereta, afritada, and mechado 😅
basically, menudo, afritada & mechado are the same except for their meat contents. Menudo has chopped pork meat and some innards, Afritada has chicken, Mechado has beef. Caldereda has the basic sauce like the three but it's more spicy, and it can contain any kind of meat.
I used to work with a Filipino who would bring a big plate full of lumpias every time we had some kind of party. They always went really fast! Sooo good! 😋❤
In some places it's called the Filipino Crack. Imagine walking in a dark alley, and a Filipino guy in a trench coat will walk up to you. "Psst kid, wanna buy some Lumpia?"
That’s only half true. I think we all give the Spanish way too much credit. Even cuisines/culture that we all think of as Spanish came from the Moors. Puerto Ricans are mixed people and it’s your West African ancestors who are responsible for a lot of the culture. West Africans were linked with the Maritime Spice Trade via the Arab World the exact way the Moors were. Practices that link you to the rest of the world are from your W. African ancestors. Dishes that utilize roots and beans like black eyed peas are specifically W. African in origin. Even eating rice is W. African from Arabs. Otherwise Asian influences in the Caribbean are directly Indian/Chinese similar to the Philippines. We need to all stop giving Europeans all the credit...
Filipinos and Puerto Ricans have a lot in common and we admire the friendship that comes along with it. Whether it the people or it’s the food we love to showcase our food since both Philippines 🇵🇭 and Puerto Rico 🇵🇷 have Spanish influences.
I am a Filipina who grew up in a neighborhood mostly occupied by Puerto Ricans. So I had lots of arroz con gandules, pernil, and pastelillos in my youth. Our cuisine is very, very similar. Your video brings back those memories. Wish I had smell-a-vision.
This popped up on my notifications and I had to get over here quick!! I’m Puertorriqueño and my sister in law is Filipino she’s been in the family 25+years and I love their food, the family is so much fun. You can tell our dishes are so close and I love that we just fit together!! BtW Cheska you keep using that spoon girl😂😂 I eat everything with a spoon lol
@@nuyorican91st lol😆..Oye Did u get power back on that side of th island?..I on the West side in Aguada.. 3 Dias no power an Agua only came back hoy...🙏 manana we get power back🙏😎✌️🇵🇷
I'm not sure if Lumpia seasoning has anything to do with the Spaniards? it's literally just ground pork with minced garlic, onions, carrots, turnips, celery or cilantro, powdered black pepper, salt, soy sauce, wrapped in rice paper and fried. I honestly don't see any "Spanish influence" on Lumpia at all.
We had the same fate during 1898 both ceded from Spain to the US. We're colonies before of the US. But we are now independent (PH) and PR as a US Territory
I am Puerto Rican, and my boyfriend is Filipino. If we ever get married and have kids, not only, will they be beautiful, but they will literally have the best food palette! 😍 i’ve been trying a lot more Filipino foods and I’m falling in love with them 🤍
I’m Puerto Rican and Filipino. I’ve had both types of food! Glad you guys made a video on it. The cooking is very similar except Filipino cuisine uses more vinegar.
This video is full of positivity! Love these people they’re really connected to each other even they’re from different countries. It’s just makes me smile how they’re happy! 😊❤️
frankly, I thought this was a Filipino YT channel bc of the name. Filipinos are used to mixing words in Filipino and English, and one of the phrases we’ve come up is “pero like” which means “but like” in English. Common among those who speak more English than Filipino. Anyway this is great! I’m glad you’re getting a taste of our local cuisine ✨ hoping to visit Puerto Rico as well :)
Yup. I'm Viet American born and raised in Orange County, California about 45 minutes from BuzzFeed's LA location, and EVERY Vietnamese grocery store will carry coco Rico for thit kho. I've actually never really heard of anyone drinking it as I've always associated it with being poured into the dish.
Yeah actually I was wondering about that. I live by the bay, I’m puerto rican, and when I saw coco rico in an asian market I was so excited and confused lol
@@Username-le4eq thit is general term for meat, kho means a stew, but it's not exactly a soup or a stew. It's more of a caramelized meat dish with boiled eggs added, however you can also make ca kho, which substitutes the meat (usually pork belly) with fish - though this version typically doesn't come with eggs.
I had a Filipino co-worker and we used to do this all the time. We concluded that the Philippines is Latin America in Asia 😂 Like the dishes we share a protein with a very similar, but with an asian twist to them.
What's interesting in Filipino food too is the fact that the recipe varies in every region. You can have adobo without vinegar and have more sauce, no pork in Muslim-majority regions, etc.
My gran brought a lumpia recipe back after one of her many travels in the sixties. Halaal, much larger, with mince and mung sprouts and a secret sauce that we still enjoy 3 generations later.
@@bilkees8151 that's a type of lumpia. We call it lumpiang togue(mung sprouts) or lumpiang gulay(vegetable). There are few types of lumpia and the one that is featured in this video is called lumpiang shanghai.
🇵🇭 I was watching and enjoying this video, but then suddenly at around 5:25 the Philippine national flag was shown and displayed vertically with the crimson red banner on the left of the video while the Philippines is currently in a state of peace and hopefully still in a state of peace in the future. ... Me (a Filipino): 😲 Oh no! ✌🏼😄🇵🇭
That Puerto Rican tomato dish looks very familiar. It's like Filipino menudo, caldereta, or mechado. Also, I wish this was longer. And a Filipino rice masa tamale vs Mexican corn tamale would be interesting.
@@garry5oh no they are not Mexico true Spanish who got independence from Spain it's closer to Argentina and Uruguay Colombia Peru and Venezuela and Cuba who all got independence from Spain Puerto Ricans and Filipinos aren't Spanish because they didn't get independence from Spain they are Americans
@@garry5ohabsolutely not, PR has very little in common vs PR and the Ph have waaaaay more in common. As a PR I have more in common with Filipinos than Mexicans even though we speak different languages. Also Spain colonized PR waaaaaaay before Mexico so no we didn’t inherit anything from Mexico, DR and Cuba are our big sisters, those were the first Latin countries discovered and colonized and were like triplets. Caribbean culture is extremely different.
White/Puerto Rican here. This may explain why I like drinking coconut water straight without mixing anything into it. I'd probably love that soda. I'm in the US and have never had the pleasure of going back to my roots, but maybe one day. I have cousins, and probably great aunts and uncles over there I've never met.
I'm Filipino American and have a huge interest in both Filipino and Latin cuisine. Off the top of my head, kaldereta/mechado/menudo/afritada is very similar in style to carne guisada, ropa vieja, carne mechada,. Filipino tamale looks very similar to pasteles (but the Filipino version uses rice flour in place of cassava/malanga/plantain), empanada is similar to empanadillas (also picadillo/giniling and carne molida), both have a fried corned beef hash dish, also bistek and bistec encebollado 😋
What cracks me up the most is that the Guy asked why she is eating with a spoon 😂 BTW eating whilst just using a Spoon and a Fork is commonplace here in the philippines. It's just normal for us to eat that way. If going to someone's house it's already a guarantee that you'd only see Spoons and Fork, I'd even bet all my savings that you'd only be served with a Spoon and Fork when eating.
This was a good video for people in Hawaii because you can do this swap At a typical party in Hawaii because a lot of Puerto Ricans married Filipinos because they were both catholic in the plantation days and because Filipino people also have Spanish names the last names are so similar like for example if your a Gonzalez Perez in Puerto Rico and both you’re parents are puertorican! You could be from Hawaii and be a Rodriguez Rivera and have a Filipino mother and a Puerto Rican father lol .
There are amor of Puerto Ricans on Hawaii I assume at this point they would be considered Hawaiian due to it being a couple air generations since migration but they did take many customs with them to Hawaii
Me gustó que mostraran la carne guisada, normalmente se ve mucha comida criolla frita de PR en los videos de youtube, pero hay un montón de recetas criollas en el país que se comen que no son frituras, y merecen atención😀
Growing up in a Filipino family in SoCal, I was always finding the CocoRico soda in various Asian markets. My parents even remembered a jingle from a commercial for CocoRico
When the filipinos said the taste of the dish is same as menudo and kaldereta they basically means the same. Because those dishes has very similar in cooking process, tomato based sauce and ingredients the only difference is the meat. Menudo use pork, Kaldereta use goat meat. There are also Afritada that use chicken and Mechado that use beef.
By watching this video i think theres a lot of similarities about the ph and other latin countries that is us due to colonization as a filipino i feel more connected to them than other asian countries
Although the Philippines is geographically/ethnically Indo-Polynesian, I feel as if the Philippines has no "neighbor" to relate with on the subject of Spanish culture. I'm just as much related to any Spanish speaking Latino as I would be with Indonesians or Malaysians.
Christian Filipino can relate to Chamoro people from Guam they are Austronesian and also have spanish names. Muslim Filipino can relate to Indonesian & Malaysian.
It's interesting to see, over and over, how the legacy of Spain's colonial dominance so often involves people from opposite hemispheres saying: "Hey, our cultures have so many similarities, it's like we're long-lost cousins! And also, @#%! you, conquistadors!"
I'm not sure if Lumpia seasoning has anything to do with the Spaniards? it's literally just ground pork with minced garlic, onions, carrots, turnips, celery or cilantro, powdered black pepper, salt, soy sauce, wrapped in rice paper and fried. I honestly don't see any "Spanish influence" on Lumpia at all.
@@dayangmarikit6860 wrapped in rice paper? lumpia wrapper is made from flour and cornstarch, they're quite different. I won't say they look like egg rolls cause they are thicker and rice paper is much thinner and transparent compared to lumpia's translucent nature. It is made with ground pork, minced garlic, carrots, ground black pepper, salt, and soy sauce (not sure about turnips, celery, or cilantro, you might be misremembering or have a different recipe but all Lumpia I've had never had any of those and I'm filipino, born and raised) but you can't rule out that over time the "traditional" recipe for what was once Chinese has developed to include our own "filipino" mix, which includes a Spanish influence. Secondly despite being inspired from a different culinary culture, it still may appeal to those of a different culinary culture, for example: the use of garlic. Garlic is a big thing in Spanish cuisine as well.
bacalaito is like a similar dish in the Philippines called tortang isda isda means fish its very similar but we use anchovies instead of cod and we dont grate it and we sometimes use eggs or like combine both eggs and flour and we dont only stop there sometimes we make torta out of shrimps which is featured in the video called okoy and vegetables such as kangkong eggplants and more
Puerto Ricans don’t really grate it either lol It was a wrong choice of words. Mostly, we flake the fish off with a fork or hands. It’s very easy to make! Highly recommend trying it hot and crispy 😋
Bacalaito sounds like bacalao dish we make in Cavite City. Ours is also dried cod but its not fried. Its cooked like menudo with garbanzo and served with rice.
I'm mixed with Filipino, Puerto Rican, and German, I'm blessed that I get the best of both worlds. My father is from the Philippines, and Mom was Puerto Rican and German, so I'm so blessed
Filipino food is soo flavorful! Their lechón is similar to ours (🇵🇷). I think the main dish should have been arroz con gandules y pernil or mofongo. I don’t think of PR when I see carne guisada.
I have to admit that their Lechón is better than our PR lechón. I have a vacation house in the Philippines, and have tried their lechón there. Even the places near where I live (Vacaville California), are better than PR.
I think that was purposeful because a lot of Filipino dishes are stew like and carne guisada is similar. Arroz con gandules is similar to Nigerian rice jollof.
No no no !!! There's a big need of a 2nd episode of this video !!! How can you leave out mofongo and coquito out ???? Please make a video with those included, PLEASE ! Coquito is the BOMB !!!!
Just sharing my thoughts. Rice and bananas originated in Asia and it was probably brought in the Americas by Filipinos via the Manila Acapulco Galleon trade. As far as I know, based on the information available on the internet, dishes with rice and bananas didn't exist in the Americas before the Spanish colonization. Spain colonized the Philippines and the Americas at the same time.
I think rice is already a staple in Spain even before the conquest. The rice that the Spaniards use are actually from Arabs and Spain was once an Arab civilization for at least a thousand years. I dont know about the bananas though but it is believed that eating squid ink originated from the locals in the islands of the Philippines. The practice was then brought to Europe and Italy learned the consumption of squid ink from the Spaniards. A practice that they learned from the pacific islands of the Philippines
@@bihapi Filipinos came before Polynesians. Filipinos were the first Asian Americans in the USA. Look up the history of Austronesians so you'll understand what I'm talking about.
Some people too actually, that's why some Mexicans looks like Asians so It's kinda funny how they're saying that Filipinos are water Mexicans or something when historically, those people came from us
@@sagisag-panulat Mexicans didn't come from Filipinos but rather we all came from the same race! We all came from the Mongoloid (btw scientific name of the race, not to be used in an offensive manner) which then migrated through Russia and into Alaska, then they went down and after that through thousands of years, the people adapted to the climate of Latin America Mongoloids also migrated down to Southeast Asia, settling in Formosa (known today as Taiwan) spent a thousand years adapting to the climate AND THEN they migrated to the Philippines and to the rest of Southeast Asia, Madagascar and the Pacific The more indigenous the Mexican, the less mixed they are then the more Southeast Asian they'd look and again this is because of the climate and our origin We are all just Mongoloids who migrated and adapted to similar climates, we didn't come from eachother.
Ok here is the thing menudo is so different even in Latino america,we call menudos de pollo that means the feet the throat the mollejas the heart liver but it doesn't contain any legs or wings menudo is what is left of the pollo,and guisado here in my country is picadillo you chop potatoes chayote with carrots cilantro all in a hot pot with or without tomato sauce
We have that balacaito as well, but we use small fish or small shrimp (I forget the name of the small fish) we put it in flour and deep fried we call it "Okoy"
Filipino versions of, I suppose, Hispanic dishes (e.g. kaldereta, menudo, afritada, mechado... etc. because they all sound Spanish) taste very similar. There was a time where I thought the only difference among these dishes is the spelling XD So I'm not surprised one said menudo, the other kaldereta. Though to us, they're all tomato-based dishes, with a little difference on one ingredient (slightly perceived though) like mechado is a bit sour (because of lemon or vinegar), menudo is a bit sweet (because of raisins, and the ingredients are diced to bring out the flavor more perhaps. Also, they use ground meat), afritada is the most basic, and kaldereta is a bit spicy and thick, if I'm not mistaken, because of liver spread, not sure. I don't cook but my best friend told me lol. I love all of them though.
American-Puerto Rican actress and singer Jennifer López said on an interview that Lumpia is her favourite Filipino food because JLo was married to a half Filipino-American but got divorced..
Any Latinos that visit the Philippines will see the heavy Spanish influence, not just in the culture, food and language, but just how people behave. Most Asians are typically pretty reserved, very quiet and conservative. Filipinos are the complete opposite and more similar to Latin Americans in that they are extremely extroverted, love to dance, sing, are very social and love to joke around with foreigners. DJaying, breakdancing, hip hop and basketball are huge there. It feels much more like Mexico or a Central American country than a typical Asian country.
@Damen Rex Philippines is culturally nothing like Indonesia, Malaysia or Singapore though. Those countries have heavy Chinese or Indian influence, which the Philippines doesn't have. Jakarta and KL are also primarily Muslim, which is rare in the Philippines. Bali is Hindu. Singapore is primarily Chinese with some Indian and a few Malay. It is also highly developed and more like any East Asian country. It's nothing like the Philippines. It's not simply the religion in the Philippines that comes from Spain. It's present everywhere - the language, food, traditional clothing, architecture, culture, activities etc. Mexico is more similar to the Philippines than Indonesia, Malaysia or Singapore. I am only talking about the culture, not the people, of course we're still Southeast Asian but we were under Spanish rule for 333 years and that has altered our culture.
@@kayflip2233 theres a lot of chinese influence in filipino culture, language, and food too brought in from traders and immigrants mainly from the Fujian province (like in this video alone, lumpia is literally from chinese), while Philippines starts to resemble an Indonesian province in a lot of ways the further south you go As for indian influence, you'll only really find it in studies of precolonial animism, as well as certain loan vocabulary (eg.gulay, tupa) and our rice desserts (eg. puto) Im not saying we don't have _any_ Spanish/LatAm traits, but that more often than not alot of people when they mention this, they (unintentionally or not) also understate our Asianess and not giving it the proper credit due in forming Filipino culture and identity
Filipino flag has resemblance with latin flag like puertorico because when it was made we we're part of Hispaniola and many Filipino would be transported from asia to latin america like puertorico. Also my fiance is Puertorican 😁🇵🇭🇵🇷❤️❤️❤️
Am from the Philippines and the Bacalaito Its look similar That My dad cooks When it's Sunday (I forgot what it's called), It's has Flour, Small Fishs (that idk what the name is) , and some Sisoning. It's really similar 🤔
@@jaysonreyalbarando6558 I actually feel embarrassed for you, telling me to do some research when it is you who should be doing some research. This is from the Official Gazette of the Philippines the Philippine flag has roots in the flag family to which it belongs-that of the last group of colonies that sought independence from the Spanish Empire at the close of the 19th century, a group to which the Philippines belongs. (This include the flags of Cuba and Puerto Rico)
@@Kuyabakas This is from the Official Gazette of the Philippines the Philippine flag has roots in the flag family to which it belongs-that of the last group of colonies that sought independence from the Spanish Empire at the close of the 19th century, a group to which the Philippines belongs. (This include the flags of Cuba and Puerto Rico) this info is from the Official Gazette of the Philippines. Official Gazette na yan. Pag di mo pa alam kung ano ang Official Gazette, bahala ka mag mukhang bobo
Every work, social and family gatherings I made Shanghai/eggrolls and it's always gone before everyone gets a plate to actually eat. It's a finger food "Treasure" 😁💖🇵🇭
I love how the girls described the carne guisada as tasting like either menudo or kaldereta, thus fueling the never ending debate on what really makes the difference between menudo, kaldereta, afritada, and mechado 😅
basically, menudo, afritada & mechado are the same except for their meat contents. Menudo has chopped pork meat and some innards, Afritada has chicken, Mechado has beef. Caldereda has the basic sauce like the three but it's more spicy, and it can contain any kind of meat.
they all taste the same LOL but menudo is pork, kaldereta is goat, afritada is chicken and mechado is pork... dammit I don't know anymore! XD
Taste the same to me y because they all have tomatie sauce the only difference is the vegetable they throw in it.
@@mandiferrer and calderata has some peanut on it right???
@@rafderobles3205 What you are referring to is kare-kare, since it has peanut sauce, unlike kaldereta which does not.
I used to work with a Filipino who would bring a big plate full of lumpias every time we had some kind of party. They always went really fast! Sooo good! 😋❤
yazz even here in Philippines party any events lumpia is the first one to be gone
I stole lumpia in every birthday parties HAHAHA
In some places it's called the Filipino Crack.
Imagine walking in a dark alley, and a Filipino guy in a trench coat will walk up to you.
"Psst kid, wanna buy some Lumpia?"
@@nicogervacio3760 I relate to this HAHAHA
You guys should check out breakthrough cooking I like how he makes his whole channel about Filipino cooking as a American
I really liked this one! Being Puertorrican, It made me feel a real connection to the Phillipines. Ironically Cousins through Colonization!
Hola...kumusta amigo...
Daddy Spain has been quite around.
That’s only half true. I think we all give the Spanish way too much credit. Even cuisines/culture that we all think of as Spanish came from the Moors. Puerto Ricans are mixed people and it’s your West African ancestors who are responsible for a lot of the culture. West Africans were linked with the Maritime Spice Trade via the Arab World the exact way the Moors were. Practices that link you to the rest of the world are from your W. African ancestors. Dishes that utilize roots and beans like black eyed peas are specifically W. African in origin. Even eating rice is W. African from Arabs. Otherwise Asian influences in the Caribbean are directly Indian/Chinese similar to the Philippines. We need to all stop giving Europeans all the credit...
We are the products of Spanish-American war along with Cuba.
We Love Lechon
As a Fili-Rican, I love and support this! 🤗❤
Have you ever picked up any Spanish or the Philippine language?
My 3 daughters are FiliRicans!!!
@@RandomSkyeRoses Yes mostly Spanish and I understand a little Tagalog!
@@missmidnight6377 who taught you Spanish?
Damn.. You got colonized by spain 2x
Filipinos and Puerto Ricans have a lot in common and we admire the friendship that comes along with it. Whether it the people or it’s the food we love to showcase our food since both Philippines 🇵🇭 and Puerto Rico 🇵🇷 have Spanish influences.
I am a Filipina who grew up in a neighborhood mostly occupied by Puerto Ricans. So I had lots of arroz con gandules, pernil, and pastelillos in my youth. Our cuisine is very, very similar. Your video brings back those memories. Wish I had smell-a-vision.
wow awesome ♥
As a Filipino who loves Puerto Rican food, I appreciated this video. Lol
As a Puerto Rican that loves Filipino food, I love the video. I'm making a lot of lumpias for a birthday party.
Lumpias were a hit like always😎.
Awww thank you much
@@esmeraldakitty I agree, I stole lumpia in every birthday parties and my mom is mad at me HAHAHA
@@Jack_Español 😆❤️
This popped up on my notifications and I had to get over here quick!! I’m Puertorriqueño and my sister in law is Filipino she’s been in the family 25+years and I love their food, the family is so much fun. You can tell our dishes are so close and I love that we just fit together!!
BtW Cheska you keep using that spoon girl😂😂 I eat everything with a spoon lol
I a FiliRican and yes there are similarities!!..I love both!😋🇵🇷❤️🇵🇭🤙
Bayamon!
@@nuyorican91st lol😆..Oye Did u get power back on that side of th island?..I on the West side in Aguada.. 3 Dias no power an Agua only came back hoy...🙏 manana we get power back🙏😎✌️🇵🇷
I'm not sure if Lumpia seasoning has anything to do with the Spaniards?
it's literally just ground pork with minced garlic, onions, carrots, turnips, celery or cilantro, powdered black pepper, salt, soy sauce, wrapped in rice paper and fried.
I honestly don't see any "Spanish influence" on Lumpia at all.
@@dayangmarikit6860 yeah but you guys call use our words for alot of your dishes
Guisado
Adobo
Leches
Guisantes
Lechon
Just to name a few
@@noracarvalho8323 Rodriguez familia in comerio didn't report any outage that I know of
Stay safe friend
I was watching Jo Koy (who is a Filipino comedian) and I felt like I was seeing a long lost cousin, Filipinos and Puertoricans we are so alike ♥️♥️
like they said, it's them colonizers
We had the same fate during 1898 both ceded from Spain to the US. We're colonies before of the US. But we are now independent (PH) and PR as a US Territory
He's not a Filipino, he's American, cosplaying as Filipino
@@khust2993 w take, my guy. Tired of the same lumpia, traysikel accent jokes by people who’ve never even lived in the country.
@@khust2993 His mom is literally Filipino... Bobo ka smh.
I am Puerto Rican, and my boyfriend is Filipino. If we ever get married and have kids, not only, will they be beautiful, but they will literally have the best food palette! 😍 i’ve been trying a lot more Filipino foods and I’m falling in love with them 🤍
As a Filipino born in Puerto Rico I love this
I’m Puerto Rican and Filipino. I’ve had both types of food! Glad you guys made a video on it. The cooking is very similar except Filipino cuisine uses more vinegar.
love seeing this! Being both Puerto Rican and Filipino I appreciate this mash up!
This video is full of positivity! Love these people they’re really connected to each other even they’re from different countries. It’s just makes me smile how they’re happy! 😊❤️
I loved this episode especially since I’m Puerto Rican and Filipino
frankly, I thought this was a Filipino YT channel bc of the name. Filipinos are used to mixing words in Filipino and English, and one of the phrases we’ve come up is “pero like” which means “but like” in English. Common among those who speak more English than Filipino. Anyway this is great! I’m glad you’re getting a taste of our local cuisine ✨ hoping to visit Puerto Rico as well :)
Ivan, a lot of Vietnamese supermarkets in the US actually carry coco rico since they use it for a dish called thit kho.
Yup. I'm Viet American born and raised in Orange County, California about 45 minutes from BuzzFeed's LA location, and EVERY Vietnamese grocery store will carry coco Rico for thit kho. I've actually never really heard of anyone drinking it as I've always associated it with being poured into the dish.
@@aznmochibunny i can search it but ima still ask what is thit kho? Like a soup?
Yeah actually I was wondering about that. I live by the bay, I’m puerto rican, and when I saw coco rico in an asian market I was so excited and confused lol
@@Username-le4eq thit is general term for meat, kho means a stew, but it's not exactly a soup or a stew. It's more of a caramelized meat dish with boiled eggs added, however you can also make ca kho, which substitutes the meat (usually pork belly) with fish - though this version typically doesn't come with eggs.
Funfact: the Menudo dish is from Mexico adapted by the Filipinos during the Galleon trades
And the Menudo boy band was from Puerto Rico. 😍
@@LoneWolf-oi4yx Brilliant!!! :D
@@LoneWolf-oi4yx Puerto Rico Martin? 😁
Except the Mexican "menudo" is closer to Filipino "callos" than the Filipino "menudo."
Sorry not similar at all. Philippine menudo is more of a stew and Mexico's menudo is more similar to our callos that is more like a soupy consistency.
they bonding over being from archipelagos 🥰
When I was a kid our school had a variety of cultures and I feel so lucky. I love all of this ❤️
I love how well Puertorican and Fillipino cultures blend. Both our cuisines are incredible and comforting. Viva Puertorico! Phillipines Mabuhay! ❤❤
Me being half Filipino half Boricua knowing from the jump that they were going to love each other's food growing up with all of this at once 🤣🤣🤣
I had a Filipino co-worker and we used to do this all the time. We concluded that the Philippines is Latin America in Asia 😂 Like the dishes we share a protein with a very similar, but with an asian twist to them.
funny right? yeah. if you read the history of puerto rico and the philippines, you'll know why.
Love this. Been waiting to see a Filipino Puerto Rican video
What's interesting in Filipino food too is the fact that the recipe varies in every region. You can have adobo without vinegar and have more sauce, no pork in Muslim-majority regions, etc.
My gran brought a lumpia recipe back after one of her many travels in the sixties. Halaal, much larger, with mince and mung sprouts and a secret sauce that we still enjoy 3 generations later.
@@bilkees8151 that's a type of lumpia. We call it lumpiang togue(mung sprouts) or lumpiang gulay(vegetable). There are few types of lumpia and the one that is featured in this video is called lumpiang shanghai.
🇵🇭 I was watching and enjoying this video, but then suddenly at around 5:25 the Philippine national flag was shown and displayed vertically with the crimson red banner on the left of the video while the Philippines is currently in a state of peace and hopefully still in a state of peace in the future.
...
Me (a Filipino): 😲 Oh no!
✌🏼😄🇵🇭
I did enjoy the video but I was bothered as well...
Ow no we are at war...joke
this is how a show should be... participants eating for their tummies' enjoyment, and not just for the cameras 😁
That Puerto Rican tomato dish looks very familiar. It's like Filipino menudo, caldereta, or mechado.
Also, I wish this was longer. And a Filipino rice masa tamale vs Mexican corn tamale would be interesting.
Philippines and Puerto Rico are sister countries tied by Spain. Amazing!
PH and PR are more like small sisters, Mexico and the Philippines are the big sisters.
@@garry5oh no they are not Mexico true Spanish who got independence from Spain it's closer to Argentina and Uruguay Colombia Peru and Venezuela and Cuba who all got independence from Spain Puerto Ricans and Filipinos aren't Spanish because they didn't get independence from Spain they are Americans
No your not Spanish because they didn't get independence from Spain your Americans
And the US too, just that PH got away hahaha
@@garry5ohabsolutely not, PR has very little in common vs PR and the Ph have waaaaay more in common. As a PR I have more in common with Filipinos than Mexicans even though we speak different languages. Also Spain colonized PR waaaaaaay before Mexico so no we didn’t inherit anything from Mexico, DR and Cuba are our big sisters, those were the first Latin countries discovered and colonized and were like triplets. Caribbean culture is extremely different.
White/Puerto Rican here. This may explain why I like drinking coconut water straight without mixing anything into it. I'd probably love that soda. I'm in the US and have never had the pleasure of going back to my roots, but maybe one day. I have cousins, and probably great aunts and uncles over there I've never met.
Find a bodega that's near to you. They should have Coco Rico. Hope you get to visit P.R.
Prepare yourself to learn the language first so that when you go back to visit, you'll easily blend in with the locals.
I'm Filipino American and have a huge interest in both Filipino and Latin cuisine. Off the top of my head, kaldereta/mechado/menudo/afritada is very similar in style to carne guisada, ropa vieja, carne mechada,. Filipino tamale looks very similar to pasteles (but the Filipino version uses rice flour in place of cassava/malanga/plantain), empanada is similar to empanadillas (also picadillo/giniling and carne molida), both have a fried corned beef hash dish, also bistek and bistec encebollado 😋
I enjoyed this video! The guests were so candid and honest. The food really are similar.hahahaha
Cool that Filipinos are on Pero Like. We use Pero too haha
What cracks me up the most is that the Guy asked why she is eating with a spoon 😂 BTW eating whilst just using a Spoon and a Fork is commonplace here in the philippines. It's just normal for us to eat that way. If going to someone's house it's already a guarantee that you'd only see Spoons and Fork, I'd even bet all my savings that you'd only be served with a Spoon and Fork when eating.
This was a good video for people in Hawaii because you can do this swap
At a typical party in Hawaii because a lot of Puerto Ricans married Filipinos because they were both catholic in the plantation days and because Filipino people also have Spanish names the last names are so similar like for example if your a Gonzalez Perez in
Puerto Rico and both you’re parents are puertorican! You could be from Hawaii and be a Rodriguez Rivera and have a Filipino mother and a Puerto Rican father lol .
There are amor of Puerto Ricans on Hawaii I assume at this point they would be considered Hawaiian due to it being a couple air generations since migration but they did take many customs with them to Hawaii
@@LolaDelMarCaribe in Hawaii you are considered Hawaiian if you actually have Polynesian blood and ancestry.
Me gustó que mostraran la carne guisada, normalmente se ve mucha comida criolla frita de PR en los videos de youtube, pero hay un montón de recetas criollas en el país que se comen que no son frituras, y merecen atención😀
Growing up in a Filipino family in SoCal, I was always finding the CocoRico soda in various Asian markets. My parents even remembered a jingle from a commercial for CocoRico
When the filipinos said the taste of the dish is same as menudo and kaldereta they basically means the same. Because those dishes has very similar in cooking process, tomato based sauce and ingredients the only difference is the meat. Menudo use pork, Kaldereta use goat meat. There are also Afritada that use chicken and Mechado that use beef.
By watching this video i think theres a lot of similarities about the ph and other latin countries that is us due to colonization as a filipino i feel more connected to them than other asian countries
This is so awesome. Proud Puerto Rican here.
They first tandem have very good chemistry 😍 bagay sila
beautiful hispanic connection between two countries.
Your not Hispanic anymore your Americans
I love this so much cuz I’m Filipino and my husband is Puerto Rican 💙❤️
I didn’t realize the spoon and fork was a filipino thing 💀 but now thinking about it does make sense as we eat a lot of rice with our foods.
Filipino are one of the most down to earth people I have ever met, my cousins.
Yes i am from Puerto Rico 🇵🇷 I would love to to try Philadelphia food
Love this! Now I am hungry. The filipino store near my house carried that Coco soda. My parents would only buy it as a treat for us.
Although the Philippines is geographically/ethnically Indo-Polynesian, I feel as if the Philippines has no "neighbor" to relate with on the subject of Spanish culture. I'm just as much related to any Spanish speaking Latino as I would be with Indonesians or Malaysians.
Timor Leste can be, considering that they were conquered by the Portuguese.
What is Indo-Polynesian? I only know Austronesian (Malayo-Polynesian)
truth!
Christian Filipino can relate to Chamoro people from Guam they are Austronesian and also have spanish names.
Muslim Filipino can relate to Indonesian & Malaysian.
Hmmm. Maybe if you are from Luzon or the Vizayas but I think the people from Mindanao can relate to Indonesians or Malaysians.
I'm Filipino 🇵🇭 but when I'm in New York I'm Puerto Rican. 🇵🇷 😁😂 True story.👍🏽
Lmaooo 😂😂😂
It's interesting to see, over and over, how the legacy of Spain's colonial dominance so often involves people from opposite hemispheres saying: "Hey, our cultures have so many similarities, it's like we're long-lost cousins! And also, @#%! you, conquistadors!"
I'm not sure if Lumpia seasoning has anything to do with the Spaniards?
it's literally just ground pork with minced garlic, onions, carrots, turnips, celery or cilantro, powdered black pepper, salt, soy sauce, wrapped in rice paper and fried.
I honestly don't see any "Spanish influence" on Lumpia at all.
@@dayangmarikit6860 lumpia is a asian food...he/she just saying that cultures have so many similarities
@@dayangmarikit6860 Yes because lumpia was brought by the Chinese immigrants from Guangzhou and Fujian province
@@dayangmarikit6860 wrapped in rice paper? lumpia wrapper is made from flour and cornstarch, they're quite different. I won't say they look like egg rolls cause they are thicker and rice paper is much thinner and transparent compared to lumpia's translucent nature.
It is made with ground pork, minced garlic, carrots, ground black pepper, salt, and soy sauce (not sure about turnips, celery, or cilantro, you might be misremembering or have a different recipe but all Lumpia I've had never had any of those and I'm filipino, born and raised) but you can't rule out that over time the "traditional" recipe for what was once Chinese has developed to include our own "filipino" mix, which includes a Spanish influence.
Secondly despite being inspired from a different culinary culture, it still may appeal to those of a different culinary culture, for example: the use of garlic. Garlic is a big thing in Spanish cuisine as well.
@@mikesoria3418 Maybe modern ones in super markets, in my province they make lumpia wrappers in the local market.
love to puerto rico brothers and sisters from ph
Me encantó este video. Ya sé que puedo ir para Filipinas porque de hambre no me muero lol
It makes me so happy that Pero Like is back!!! Wth y'all where you been?
Traditional Filipinos enjoy eating our meals with our hands as well ☺️
Everyone eats with their hands. Dont assume you are very special. As your former Miss Universe once said “Why do you eat with your feet?”
@@eduardochavacano No she was asked "why do you eat with your hands" in which she responded with "what do you want us to do? Eat with our feet?"
bacalaito is like a similar dish in the Philippines called tortang isda isda means fish its very similar but we use anchovies instead of cod and we dont grate it and we sometimes use eggs or like combine both eggs and flour and we dont only stop there sometimes we make torta out of shrimps which is featured in the video called okoy and vegetables such as kangkong eggplants and more
Puerto Ricans don’t really grate it either lol It was a wrong choice of words. Mostly, we flake the fish off with a fork or hands. It’s very easy to make! Highly recommend trying it hot and crispy 😋
Their energies are just immaculate!
Bacalaito sounds like bacalao dish we make in Cavite City. Ours is also dried cod but its not fried. Its cooked like menudo with garbanzo and served with rice.
I'm mixed with Filipino, Puerto Rican, and German, I'm blessed that I get the best of both worlds. My father is from the Philippines, and Mom was Puerto Rican and German, so I'm so blessed
I’m Boricua, Wife is Filipina.
Many of our dishes are similar , and Filipino dishes are way better than ours.
Boricua? From which country are you?
@@SunShine_sublime
Boriken
@@Dangic23 😂😂😂
@@SunShine_sublime boricuas are the people of puerto rico
wooh.
Filipino food is soo flavorful! Their lechón is similar to ours (🇵🇷). I think the main dish should have been arroz con gandules y pernil or mofongo. I don’t think of PR when I see carne guisada.
I have to admit that their Lechón is better than our PR lechón.
I have a vacation house in the Philippines, and have tried their lechón there.
Even the places near where I live (Vacaville California), are better than PR.
I wanna try lechón from other countries too! And other similar dishes like Empanadas and etc. I'm curious how they actually are similar to one other.
I think that was purposeful because a lot of Filipino dishes are stew like and carne guisada is similar. Arroz con gandules is similar to Nigerian rice jollof.
Arroz con gandules is similar to our filipino arroz a la valenciana
@@Dangic23 Try babi guling (suckling pig) in Bali. It's even better than Filipino lechon and I'm Filipino.
Necesito más videos like ito. Jaja. Sana en el futuro gumawa pa ustedes ng videos como así. Un abrazo fuerte desde Filipinas! 😊😁 🇵🇭
ivan is cute and he look so fun to be with.🥰
I definitely wanna see a Dominican and Filipino food swap now😍😍
Yep, we don't use chopsticks much unless we eat at Japanese, Korean, Chinese restuarants 😅
Fun fact: Puerto Rico and the Philippines both got annexed by the USA at the same time.
Yup via Treaty of Paris (1898)
Also Cuba got independence from Spain
And that makes Puerto Rico and Philippines not Spanish countries until given back for now your Americans
No no no !!! There's a big need of a 2nd episode of this video !!! How can you leave out mofongo and coquito out ???? Please make a video with those included, PLEASE ! Coquito is the BOMB !!!!
Y la piña colada 😋
@@Rain_dear ♥
Adobo is good but I think we all should spread Sinigang more! That’s my fave
Iván is so cute. Someone please send him the message 😂
It’s the same in many ways. Spanish colonists left their impression.
Puerto Ricans and Filipinos aren't Spanish because they didn't get independence from Spain
Just sharing my thoughts. Rice and bananas originated in Asia and it was probably brought in the Americas by Filipinos via the Manila Acapulco Galleon trade. As far as I know, based on the information available on the internet, dishes with rice and bananas didn't exist in the Americas before the Spanish colonization. Spain colonized the Philippines and the Americas at the same time.
I think rice is already a staple in Spain even before the conquest. The rice that the Spaniards use are actually from Arabs and Spain was once an Arab civilization for at least a thousand years. I dont know about the bananas though but it is believed that eating squid ink originated from the locals in the islands of the Philippines. The practice was then brought to Europe and Italy learned the consumption of squid ink from the Spaniards. A practice that they learned from the pacific islands of the Philippines
@@bihapi Filipinos came before Polynesians. Filipinos were the first Asian Americans in the USA. Look up the history of Austronesians so you'll understand what I'm talking about.
Also coconuts and carabao mango/Philippine mango that's called Manila mangoe in Mexico?? not sure tho
Some people too actually, that's why some Mexicans looks like Asians so It's kinda funny how they're saying that Filipinos are water Mexicans or something when historically, those people came from us
@@sagisag-panulat Mexicans didn't come from Filipinos but rather we all came from the same race!
We all came from the Mongoloid (btw scientific name of the race, not to be used in an offensive manner) which then migrated through Russia and into Alaska, then they went down and after that through thousands of years, the people adapted to the climate of Latin America
Mongoloids also migrated down to Southeast Asia, settling in Formosa (known today as Taiwan) spent a thousand years adapting to the climate AND THEN they migrated to the Philippines and to the rest of Southeast Asia, Madagascar and the Pacific
The more indigenous the Mexican, the less mixed they are then the more Southeast Asian they'd look and again this is because of the climate and our origin
We are all just Mongoloids who migrated and adapted to similar climates, we didn't come from eachother.
they got me when they said that we have the same seasoning because of the colonizers HAHAHAHAHAH 1:12
Both looks so yummy 😋 omg I wish I can find a good restaurant from Philippine and Puerto Rico
Ok here is the thing menudo is so different even in Latino america,we call menudos de pollo that means the feet the throat the mollejas the heart liver but it doesn't contain any legs or wings menudo is what is left of the pollo,and guisado here in my country is picadillo you chop potatoes chayote with carrots cilantro all in a hot pot with or without tomato sauce
We have that balacaito as well, but we use small fish or small shrimp (I forget the name of the small fish) we put it in flour and deep fried we call it "Okoy"
Filipino versions of, I suppose, Hispanic dishes (e.g. kaldereta, menudo, afritada, mechado... etc. because they all sound Spanish) taste very similar. There was a time where I thought the only difference among these dishes is the spelling XD So I'm not surprised one said menudo, the other kaldereta. Though to us, they're all tomato-based dishes, with a little difference on one ingredient (slightly perceived though) like mechado is a bit sour (because of lemon or vinegar), menudo is a bit sweet (because of raisins, and the ingredients are diced to bring out the flavor more perhaps. Also, they use ground meat), afritada is the most basic, and kaldereta is a bit spicy and thick, if I'm not mistaken, because of liver spread, not sure. I don't cook but my best friend told me lol. I love all of them though.
To me, they all look the same. Until someone points out which is which.
@@girlsquad224 you can easily tell by the meat used and how the meat was cut.
The second Meal that they served is like KALDERETA a beef stew as what she describe and said in the ingredient.
Or pochero
interesting, not just the food, the landscape, but the flags look similar too (the triangle, the stars, then the stripes)
American-Puerto Rican actress and singer Jennifer López said on an interview that Lumpia is her favourite Filipino food because JLo was married to a half Filipino-American but got divorced..
Can't go wrong with those foods. Good stuff.
Any Latinos that visit the Philippines will see the heavy Spanish influence, not just in the culture, food and language, but just how people behave. Most Asians are typically pretty reserved, very quiet and conservative. Filipinos are the complete opposite and more similar to Latin Americans in that they are extremely extroverted, love to dance, sing, are very social and love to joke around with foreigners. DJaying, breakdancing, hip hop and basketball are huge there. It feels much more like Mexico or a Central American country than a typical Asian country.
@Damen Rex Philippines is culturally nothing like Indonesia, Malaysia or Singapore though. Those countries have heavy Chinese or Indian influence, which the Philippines doesn't have. Jakarta and KL are also primarily Muslim, which is rare in the Philippines. Bali is Hindu. Singapore is primarily Chinese with some Indian and a few Malay. It is also highly developed and more like any East Asian country. It's nothing like the Philippines. It's not simply the religion in the Philippines that comes from Spain. It's present everywhere - the language, food, traditional clothing, architecture, culture, activities etc. Mexico is more similar to the Philippines than Indonesia, Malaysia or Singapore. I am only talking about the culture, not the people, of course we're still Southeast Asian but we were under Spanish rule for 333 years and that has altered our culture.
@@kayflip2233 theres a lot of chinese influence in filipino culture, language, and food too brought in from traders and immigrants mainly from the Fujian province (like in this video alone, lumpia is literally from chinese), while Philippines starts to resemble an Indonesian province in a lot of ways the further south you go
As for indian influence, you'll only really find it in studies of precolonial animism, as well as certain loan vocabulary (eg.gulay, tupa) and our rice desserts (eg. puto)
Im not saying we don't have _any_ Spanish/LatAm traits, but that more often than not alot of people when they mention this, they (unintentionally or not) also understate our Asianess and not giving it the proper credit due in forming Filipino culture and identity
@@zaqareemalcolm compared to the rest of Asia and Southeast Asia, Philippines has the least Chinese influence.
@@kayflip2233 debatable because east timor exists, but also that isn't the same as insignificant or none at all either
Your not Spanish
This deserves more views. Where my Filipinos at?
We have something similar to the bacalito, but instead of bacalao which would be expensive here for us we use bolinao (anchioves)
This was great!!! Now I'm hungry though
Filipino flag has resemblance with latin flag like puertorico because when it was made we we're part of Hispaniola and many Filipino would be transported from asia to latin america like puertorico. Also my fiance is Puertorican 😁🇵🇭🇵🇷❤️❤️❤️
I prefer my lumpia dipped in “tuba” vinegar with crushed garlic, pepper corns & rock sugar. 😋😋😋
Damn. You are elite.
tbf Menudo and Kaldereta kinda taste alike but Kalderatas slightly spicy/smoky sometimes
Kaldereta is mostly beef. I have never eaten a caldereta made of pork or chicken. If it's chicken, I call it as afritada.
There should be an episode of Mexicans and Indians swapping spicy foods lol
The best part of this video is the demonstration of how we eat here in the Philippines. by spoon and fork
I’m half Puerto Ricans and half Filipino don’t know either culture well😢
I love lumpia specially the pescada or lumpiang isda,I wanna try the cod fish since that reminds me of tortang dilis or okoy yum yum.
The spoon thingy, makes me chuckle.
My daughter is filipino and Puerto Rican
looks like im going to PR in the future
Am from the Philippines and the Bacalaito Its look similar That My dad cooks When it's Sunday (I forgot what it's called), It's has Flour, Small Fishs (that idk what the name is) , and some Sisoning. It's really similar 🤔
homegirl was on that plate at the end..thats awesome=)
''You are also eating with the spoon?'' Lol.. nice..
Pinoys and Puerto Ricans loves Lechon🐖🐖
Fun Fact: the Puerto Rican flag was one of the design inspiration of the Philippine flag.
What are you talking about do some research
Huh? Hahhahahhaa. Fakkkkeeeeee.
i think it's czech republic
@@jaysonreyalbarando6558 I actually feel embarrassed for you, telling me to do some research when it is you who should be doing some research.
This is from the Official Gazette of the Philippines
the Philippine flag has roots in the flag family to which it belongs-that of the last group of colonies that sought independence from the Spanish Empire at the close of the 19th century, a group to which the Philippines belongs. (This include the flags of Cuba and Puerto Rico)
@@Kuyabakas This is from the Official Gazette of the Philippines
the Philippine flag has roots in the flag family to which it belongs-that of the last group of colonies that sought independence from the Spanish Empire at the close of the 19th century, a group to which the Philippines belongs. (This include the flags of Cuba and Puerto Rico)
this info is from the Official Gazette of the Philippines. Official Gazette na yan. Pag di mo pa alam kung ano ang Official Gazette, bahala ka mag mukhang bobo
Every work, social and family gatherings I made Shanghai/eggrolls and it's always gone before everyone gets a plate to actually eat. It's a finger food "Treasure" 😁💖🇵🇭