Kinilaw isn’t all that uncommon here in Vismin! In fact, we have it almost every sunday after church. Sometimes if my dad’s lazy we get premade sauce at the market where we get our fish. I’ve never had it without coconut milk.
I agree with this. Tabon-tabon adds another depth to the flavor and if there's no tabon-tabon available, what we usually did is find a "putot" of the coconut and use it as a tabon-tabon alternative.
I love Kinilaw!! Especially this Visayan version (with coconut milk). And I'm not surprised to know that this dish was around during pre-colonial times, at all. Great work!
probably Austronesian sailors always eat kinilaw during their long voyage. since you just need vinegar from coconut which is abundant in Southeast Asia.
In northern mindanao we use coconut vinegar to cleanse the fish afterwards tuba mix with tabun tabun, filter the tabun tabun, mix the tuba with onion, ginger and suha(kafir). It will be sweet because of tuba.
For me, the "freshness" of the fish matters the most since you will be eating it raw. The fish has to be super fresh and firm. Good thing we have an abundance of fresh fish in our region all year round. My dad's kinilaw is simply the best!👌 We dont put coconut milk by the way. Kudos to your content creator for featuring these pre colonial, originally filipino dishes. So simple and yet worthy of recognition. Greetings from Mindanao! 🙂
We prepare alot of kinilaw like food but we seldom use coconut milk. We just use vinegar, ginger, chilis and calamansi. Ganda ng quality ng video btw. I think Erwan goal of making it a brand slowly coming to fruition.
It makes us so happy to know we are changing lives and inspiring families to cook healthy foods. We love what we do, and we will never stop making healthy recipes for you all to enjoy. Always stay healthy, Signature: Aayah, Mohamad, and Haneen (Healtalicious)
@@featrmedia any citrus or lime will do, but that bitter type of fruit or say Tabun-tabun or young bud coconut fruit that could cleanse any microbial and help good digestive characteristics.
Whoa, Market Man! Blast from the past to an OG food blogger who had gorgeous pictures, great writing, and of course a grounded passion and deep knowledge of food. Thanks for lending your platform to this gem of a man, FEATR.
I love Kinilaw, although I’ve never had it with coconut milk! I can’t wait to make this! The only thing I would change in this recipe is to grate the ginger rather than julienne. I wish I knew this recipe before my mother passed! She and my father loved Kinilaw! I miss you Ma! ☮️🖖🏽
It's much better with coconut milk because it tames the sourness of the vinegar and gives it a more creamy and sweet mouthfeel. Best made with a white fish like deboned milkfish but works with tuna or Spanish mackerel.
This is how we prepare kinilaw in Ormoc. We also do seaweed kinilaw using lato or guso. We usually consume these with meat dishes like lechon and dinuguan. We appreciate all your efforts to highlight Pre-colonial cuisines and other lesser-known PH dishes. For sure, pinoy cuisine is more than the deep fried meat dishes we constantly hear about online. Or sinigang. or kare-kare. As someone who grew up in Visayas, I can say with confidence that I've had more tinuwang isda (Tinola) than sinigang. I was quite surprised to know through one of your episodes, where Erwan and Ninong Ry cooked tinuwa , that not everyone grew up eating fish tinuwa and mixed seafood tinuwa. There's still very little representation on Visayan cuisine, especially seafood dishes. We have a lot to know about our own cuisine. I'm excited to know what other kababayans are cooking up in their kitchens!
My favorite kinilaw growing up is tanigue with crushed green mango, onion, pepper, salt, ginger and vinegar. Give it a mix, squeeze out some of the juice and enjoy...
being born in PI, living in Hawaii for over 40 years since 2 years old. i just discovered this dish going home to Cebu a few years ago. Hawaii and all of the Pacific has a raw fish dish. Samoa and Tahiti uses coconut milk in their version of this. proof more how connected PI is to Polynesia.
Nobody in the mainland, in this day and age, calls it PI. Usually those who do are born or raised in the USA. It's a dead giveaway. Here, the short form of the Philippines is either PH or RP.
When you said PI I thought you meant Pacific Islands because almost all Pacific Islands have this dish with coconut milk or other traditional sauce made from coconut and it's not just popular in the Polynesian region but also the Micronesian and some Melanesian islands. And I know the Philippines indigenous peoples are dark skin like Melanesians so I'm not surprised that some cultures of food and traditions may be similar to Pacific Islands...
Very similar method to Ceviche The classical version uses a round of sweet potato, raw kernel of giant white corn, roasted corn kernels, aji, key lime, sliced red onion, salt and pepper. Many folk who have Ceviche doesn't experience the classical preparation, they have some fancy modern version usually where the fish is cut up too small. It is not souced or pickled as such, the texture is important to maintain.
I use Parrot Fish or Trigger Fish(rubbed with salt in vinegar first) , Kamias/Bilimbi, unripe Dalandan/Calamansi, unripe Mango, Tomatoes, White Onion/Onion Leaves , Coconut Milk and Itlog Maalat
Ung niyog lagyan nio po ng binaga n uling to make it burn or cook littlebit, it adds aroma once nag extract na kau ng coconut milk... Ganyan ginagawa ng Lola q when I was in Eastern Samar..I love it ...I always look for kinilaw in some restaurants in Manila. But hinahanap hanap q tlga ung timpla ng Lola q..🥰
In the Balangay Archeological site in Butuan, scientist were able to excavate remains of halved Tabon tabon fruits alongside with cut fish bones indicating that the practice of cooking Kinilaw is already taking place as early as 10th century AD.
The best kinilaw is in 1st district of misamis oriental.it is unique recipe among kinilaw .it has 2 other engridients that can't be found in other places.tabon2x and suwa. Suwa is a citrus family distinct in itself because of its strong aroma.try to get with it.
Hindi ganyan iyong pagkikilaw ko dito sa Mindanao kundi iyong ingredients na nilalagay ko ay luya, bawang, suka, calamansi, biasong, tabon-tabon, native sili. Hayss na imagine ko tuloy ang anhang at sarap.. ❤❤❤ Nasubukan ko na iyong kilawin na may gata pero di ko bet. Mas masarap talaga pag purely suka lang at hindi matamis.
Noon bata pa kami pagkatapos namin mangisda ng Dilis or Tamban Kinilaw agad. Sarap niyan lalo na pag gata ng niyog ang gamit ❤️😁. - Biliran Province. #FEATR❤️
Yum this looks amazing, we call this oka, it's eaten alot in the Pacific islands including new Zealand...we use lemon or lime as our choice of acid, but keen to try vinegar
I'm Visayan and coconut milk is common in our kinilaw. Everything in here is common but usually for the bare version is with vinegar, chili, onion and ginger.
You know what's fun is when I am cooking at home for my friends, they always asked me what's the measurement? How much, a teaspoon? a tablespoon? I always tell them i just eyeball it 😅, I never really measure and that's how i learned cooking from my Lola and my Mum. I have hard time teaching my friends when it comes to cooking, so they just bring all the ingredients at home and cook for them which is always nice to share with them. Bawas gastos 😁
Thanks to you, I learnt something about eating raw fish, never clean fish with water, whatta valuable input, thank you. I am Indian and we always wash fish with water and I could never eat it raw because it was off putting, learning your technique, I could eat a whole tuna raw in the last two days.
hehe I like raw fish too but have to "slow down" and eat tuna once a week. Its just because the seas and oceans are sadly polluted unlike the olden days. Tuna has some mercury content.
In Mindanao, there is a fruit that is called “tabon” which is used instead of coconut milk. Tabon removes the “fishiness” of the kinilaw and adds a refreshing flavor to it.
@@bisdakako4830 you can't get lactose intolerance from coco milk, maybe you used nestle cream. That's what my father mixes in the kinilaw he makes because its faster than having to squeeze the milk from coconuts
Shrimp kinilaw ang nakagisnan kong kinilaw dito sa amin pero minsan gumagawa din kami ng fish kinilaw(small fish). After ng highschool ko lang nalaman(naexpose) na may fish kinilaw/sinuglaw pala (uses big fish meat). Kaya yung kinilaw na gumagamit ng malalaking isda ay napaka foreign at the same time weird (texture wise) para sa akin lol. Mas paborito ko pa rin ang shrimp kinilaw kompara sa ibang kinilaw. Kaya kapag sinabing kinilaw, shrimp kinilaw talaga ang unang sasagi sa isipan ko.
my dad makes raw fish all the time but he uses coconut cream. delicious especially if its snapper i like to add some sweet chilli sauce to mine. yum yum yum 😋
i am from the visayan region and this is the 1st time i see using coconut milk & it should have the "BIASONG" local crop mostly avalable only on vismin & no tomatoes
I am from India and recently had a taste of kinilaw, which I loved. I want to make it at home, but my mother is terrified of me eating raw fish. She doesn't believe me when I say it gets 'cooked' in vinegar."
Where I'm from it's more common to use small fish like galungong (looks like GG idk what it's called). They eat the skin too. I dont eat kinilaw but I love to dip food on the sauce and pour it on rice.
Kinilaw isn’t all that uncommon here in Vismin! In fact, we have it almost every sunday after church. Sometimes if my dad’s lazy we get premade sauce at the market where we get our fish. I’ve never had it without coconut milk.
Exactly. I love the fact when you said “every Sunday”, totally reminiscing everything with my Dad when I was back in the Philippines.
I've tasted a Kinilaw here in Min that was made by our relative. Instead of coconut milk, he mixed mayonnaise. Super creamy!
I never tasted kinilaw with coconut milk. It usually always had cucumber, red onion/shalot, and radish.
The best woh coconut milk
Theres a premade sauce for kinilaw?
Northern Mindanao style with fresh tuba,suha or biasong and the tabon².
This is the best version in the whole Philippines,change my mind !
For me, kinilaw is incomplete without red chili. Thanks for featuring my favorite kinilaw Featr!
To each their own, thanks Jae! It's our favorite too!
The addition of tabon-tabon is what makes the Northern Mindanao version of this dish different.
amen!!!!
true
Thats so true...
I agree with this. Tabon-tabon adds another depth to the flavor and if there's no tabon-tabon available, what we usually did is find a "putot" of the coconut and use it as a tabon-tabon alternative.
I missed the kinilaw in Iligan City!
I love Kinilaw!! Especially this Visayan version (with coconut milk). And I'm not surprised to know that this dish was around during pre-colonial times, at all. Great work!
yes yes 😋😋😋
probably Austronesian sailors always eat kinilaw during their long voyage. since you just need vinegar from coconut which is abundant in Southeast Asia.
In northern mindanao we use coconut vinegar to cleanse the fish afterwards tuba mix with tabun tabun, filter the tabun tabun, mix the tuba with onion, ginger and suha(kafir). It will be sweet because of tuba.
My family is from Oroquieta and we use tabun tabun! I now live in Canada and how I wish we had tabun tabun here. So much better with it
For me, the "freshness" of the fish matters the most since you will be eating it raw. The fish has to be super fresh and firm.
Good thing we have an abundance of fresh fish in our region all year round.
My dad's kinilaw is simply the best!👌
We dont put coconut milk by the way. Kudos to your content creator for featuring these pre colonial, originally filipino dishes. So simple and yet worthy of recognition.
Greetings from Mindanao! 🙂
We prepare alot of kinilaw like food but we seldom use coconut milk. We just use vinegar, ginger, chilis and calamansi.
Ganda ng quality ng video btw. I think Erwan goal of making it a brand slowly coming to fruition.
Same.
Same in gensan we dont use coconut milk and tomatoes in our kinilaw.
Thanks for featuring my favorite Filipino food! Lots of people don't know about it and I think it needs to get the recognition that it deserves!
It makes us so happy to know we are changing lives and inspiring families to cook healthy foods. We love what we do, and we will never stop making healthy recipes for you all to enjoy.
Always stay healthy,
Signature: Aayah, Mohamad, and Haneen (Healtalicious)
hu u
I'm a foreigner living in the Philippines, Believe me, Kinilaw is amazing!
Twas nice seeing/watching Mr Marketman here! More collabs!! Goodjob Featr!!!
Probably the O.G. of internet food vloggers in the Philippines. Been a follower of Marketman or MarketManila since before Facebook and TikTok era.
When you seeks exciting dishes. Go for Kinilaw!
Kinilaw is not complete without "Tabon-Tabon" in our home town Misamis Occidental. That's what makes our very own fish kinilaw and squid kinilaw😍
Yes!! My family is from Oroquieta and I miss eating fresh kinilaw! I now live in Canada :(
i feel its only useful with really strong tasting fish, but that's just my opinion - Erwan
Whats tabon tabon?
it also mellows the sourness of the vinegar
@@featrmedia any citrus or lime will do, but that bitter type of fruit or say Tabun-tabun or young bud coconut fruit that could cleanse any microbial and help good digestive characteristics.
My favourite blogger. Smart witty and humorous too
Whoa, Market Man! Blast from the past to an OG food blogger who had gorgeous pictures, great writing, and of course a grounded passion and deep knowledge of food. Thanks for lending your platform to this gem of a man, FEATR.
I remember the time when Joel jealously guarded his anonymity. Then Anthony Bourdain happened, and we all learned his name and face.
I love Kinilaw, although I’ve never had it with coconut milk! I can’t wait to make this! The only thing I would change in this recipe is to grate the ginger rather than julienne. I wish I knew this recipe before my mother passed! She and my father loved Kinilaw! I miss you Ma! ☮️🖖🏽
It's much better with coconut milk because it tames the sourness of the vinegar and gives it a more creamy and sweet mouthfeel. Best made with a white fish like deboned milkfish but works with tuna or Spanish mackerel.
This videooo Sounds so good. Great productionnn!
This is how we prepare kinilaw in Ormoc. We also do seaweed kinilaw using lato or guso. We usually consume these with meat dishes like lechon and dinuguan.
We appreciate all your efforts to highlight Pre-colonial cuisines and other lesser-known PH dishes. For sure, pinoy cuisine is more than the deep fried meat dishes we constantly hear about online. Or sinigang. or kare-kare. As someone who grew up in Visayas, I can say with confidence that I've had more tinuwang isda (Tinola) than sinigang. I was quite surprised to know through one of your episodes, where Erwan and Ninong Ry cooked tinuwa , that not everyone grew up eating fish tinuwa and mixed seafood tinuwa.
There's still very little representation on Visayan cuisine, especially seafood dishes. We have a lot to know about our own cuisine. I'm excited to know what other kababayans are cooking up in their kitchens!
Kinilaw is great with a little lukot(a type of seaweed kinda like cooked spaghetti) instead of cucumbers.
Love seeing precolonial dishes they need more recognition. Would love to see some recipes originating from the south! 💜
I agree! Our Mindanao brothers and sisters have delicious food, too!
SA Amin northern Mindanao part Ng MIS occ,mis or. Lanao,camiguin.. Hindi pedi walang tabon2 at biasong/ dayap.
Thank you for sharing this recipe, will definitely try it at home
My favorite kinilaw growing up is tanigue with crushed green mango, onion, pepper, salt, ginger and vinegar. Give it a mix, squeeze out some of the juice and enjoy...
Thank you for featuring local dishes ♡. i think kinilaw is so underrated and should be promoted more.
i'm excited for tthis segment
being born in PI, living in Hawaii for over 40 years since 2 years old. i just discovered this dish going home to Cebu a few years ago. Hawaii and all of the Pacific has a raw fish dish. Samoa and Tahiti uses coconut milk in their version of this. proof more how connected PI is to Polynesia.
Don't call it PI. It's the Philippines.
Nobody in the mainland, in this day and age, calls it PI. Usually those who do are born or raised in the USA. It's a dead giveaway.
Here, the short form of the Philippines is either PH or RP.
When you said PI I thought you meant Pacific Islands because almost all Pacific Islands have this dish with coconut milk or other traditional sauce made from coconut and it's not just popular in the Polynesian region but also the Micronesian and some Melanesian islands. And I know the Philippines indigenous peoples are dark skin like Melanesians so I'm not surprised that some cultures of food and traditions may be similar to Pacific Islands...
Very similar method to Ceviche
The classical version uses a round of sweet potato, raw kernel of giant white corn, roasted corn kernels, aji, key lime, sliced red onion, salt and pepper.
Many folk who have Ceviche doesn't experience the classical preparation, they have some fancy modern version usually where the fish is cut up too small.
It is not souced or pickled as such, the texture is important to maintain.
One of my favorites -- kinilaw.
I use Parrot Fish or Trigger Fish(rubbed with salt in vinegar first) , Kamias/Bilimbi, unripe Dalandan/Calamansi, unripe Mango, Tomatoes, White Onion/Onion Leaves , Coconut Milk and Itlog Maalat
i really love watching the real market man! i am a follower of his ig account!
Will definitely try this one of this days. It appeals enticing in the mouth. Will surely gonna love it. Thanks for this one.
I love how it's authetically prepared! thanks for showing how kinilaw is really done. 👍
Ung niyog lagyan nio po ng binaga n uling to make it burn or cook littlebit, it adds aroma once nag extract na kau ng coconut milk... Ganyan ginagawa ng Lola q when I was in Eastern Samar..I love it ...I always look for kinilaw in some restaurants in Manila. But hinahanap hanap q tlga ung timpla ng Lola q..🥰
We have the same kinilaw recipe ❤️ we also ad crushed roasted peanuts 🥜
Ooooo, interesting. Where is this?
@@featrmedia from negros occidental. my father used to make the exact recipe on the video with the addition of the peanuts. 😊
Thank you for featuring local dishes ♡
THE BEST!
I love to add chopped roasted pork liempo and a mango strips in it. Solbad gyud
I just subscribed, i love this series of decolonizing our food and really sticking to our native roots. ❤️
I hope you feature mr marketman in mkre videos. He explains really well.
Thank you for sharing sir. Loving contents such as this.
Ang sarap bg kinilaw❤️thanks featr❤️
i think kinilaw is so underrated and should be promoted more
Here in Mindanao we use tabon tabon for kinilaw which makes it more endemic. Erwan even tried making kinilaw using tabon tabon once before.
Wow! Loved the concept of this dish 💜💜
In the Balangay Archeological site in Butuan, scientist were able to excavate remains of halved Tabon tabon fruits alongside with cut fish bones indicating that the practice of cooking Kinilaw is already taking place as early as 10th century AD.
The precolonial dish is basically "paksiw" in essence, meat marinated in vinegar/fruit and salt, from ancient adobo to modern sinigang.
Wow! Kalami! Kinilaw is our favorite in Cebu province every 3pm,tapos mais ang kanin ubos ang isang malaking kalderong kanin.
Yeah right! One of the all time favorites here in Leyte. Kinilaw and Pakdol
yes! our pre-colonial food... thnx
More Joel Binamira episodes please
One of my favorite BUT never learned how to make it.. thank goodness, there are some places in Manila to get them whenever I'm in town for vacation...
This video is actually quite relaxing 😌
The best kinilaw is in 1st district of misamis oriental.it is unique recipe among kinilaw .it has 2 other engridients that can't be found in other places.tabon2x and suwa. Suwa is a citrus family distinct in itself because of its strong aroma.try to get with it.
Hindi ganyan iyong pagkikilaw ko dito sa Mindanao kundi iyong ingredients na nilalagay ko ay luya, bawang, suka, calamansi, biasong, tabon-tabon, native sili. Hayss na imagine ko tuloy ang anhang at sarap.. ❤❤❤
Nasubukan ko na iyong kilawin na may gata pero di ko bet. Mas masarap talaga pag purely suka lang at hindi matamis.
Ahhh i love marketman!!! More please 🙏🏼
So good to watch MarketMan!
Keepsafe all the staff of FEATR❤️
You too, guys!
more Joel Binamira content please!!!❤
Loooove the outdoor kitchen of the real market man!
Thank you for featuring Filipino local dishes. Now I wanna make one 😊
Need to know other kind of fishes besides tuna milkfish salmon for kinilaw. Any suggestions?
Thank you for this very informative and well-done video!
Noon bata pa kami pagkatapos namin mangisda ng Dilis or Tamban Kinilaw agad. Sarap niyan lalo na pag gata ng niyog ang gamit ❤️😁.
- Biliran Province.
#FEATR❤️
Cute! Glad we have great memories tied to good food 😍
My Dad's favorite and specialty as well..Mis him with this dish
Looks so yummy , thank you gor sharing watching frim Chicago
Yum this looks amazing, we call this oka, it's eaten alot in the Pacific islands including new Zealand...we use lemon or lime as our choice of acid, but keen to try vinegar
I haven't not try the kinilaw with gata.d ba sasakit ung tummy pag direct lang agad ung gata na e mix dun sa kinilaw?
I'm Visayan and coconut milk is common in our kinilaw. Everything in here is common but usually for the bare version is with vinegar, chili, onion and ginger.
You know what's fun is when I am cooking at home for my friends, they always asked me what's the measurement? How much, a teaspoon? a tablespoon? I always tell them i just eyeball it 😅, I never really measure and that's how i learned cooking from my Lola and my Mum. I have hard time teaching my friends when it comes to cooking, so they just bring all the ingredients at home and cook for them which is always nice to share with them. Bawas gastos 😁
I really enjoy the kinilaw our cousins make for us in the Zambales provinces. Very simple yet so tasty.
This is HEAVEN. PLEASE DO MORE OF THIS SERIES. 🙏🏻
Thanks to you, I learnt something about eating raw fish, never clean fish with water, whatta valuable input, thank you. I am Indian and we always wash fish with water and I could never eat it raw because it was off putting, learning your technique, I could eat a whole tuna raw in the last two days.
hehe I like raw fish too but have to "slow down" and eat tuna once a week. Its just because the seas and oceans are sadly polluted unlike the olden days. Tuna has some mercury content.
@@jade5202 ha ha, true.
I used to be cautious but after tasting it I fell in love. Best eaten if you know it's cook fresh.
Nice
if kinilaw predates ceviche, did the spanish bring kinilaw to south america & called it ceviche? or are they both separate entities?
can use also coconut milk in the can?
In Mindanao, there is a fruit that is called “tabon” which is used instead of coconut milk. Tabon removes the “fishiness” of the kinilaw and adds a refreshing flavor to it.
I agree im from cagayan de oro city ..we called it tabon tabon ..we r not using coconut milk ksi some people is lactose intolerance i guess
@@bisdakako4830 you can't get lactose intolerance from coco milk, maybe you used nestle cream.
That's what my father mixes in the kinilaw he makes because its faster than having to squeeze the milk from coconuts
The time he add the vinegar in grated coconut instead of water , is the same as breaktrough restaurant in Iloilo city made their kinilaw ,
I am a fan of your blogs!
Northern Mindanao represent! Tabon-tabon x Bihasong sa kinilaw hehehe
"I don't measure it, i do this by feel"
Just like Ninong Ry 👏👏👍 haha
In MINDANAO DAVAO we use Tabon Tabon ,Biasong citrus instead of Coconut and offcourse calamansi and Suka with a Lil bit of tungog ..
This is great stuff!
What fish did you used, sir?
Shrimp kinilaw ang nakagisnan kong kinilaw dito sa amin pero minsan gumagawa din kami ng fish kinilaw(small fish). After ng highschool ko lang nalaman(naexpose) na may fish kinilaw/sinuglaw pala (uses big fish meat). Kaya yung kinilaw na gumagamit ng malalaking isda ay napaka foreign at the same time weird (texture wise) para sa akin lol. Mas paborito ko pa rin ang shrimp kinilaw kompara sa ibang kinilaw. Kaya kapag sinabing kinilaw, shrimp kinilaw talaga ang unang sasagi sa isipan ko.
I haven't tried kinilaw in my life I want to try it some day.
Love kinilaw love this recipe-- saving this recipe
Hi Featr and Joel, great video! May I ask which fish did you use?
tanigue!
@@MartinNisms thank you chef!
Sinuglaw na ang naging uso ngayon sa amin sa mindanao..Pinaghalong kinilaw na isda at grilled meat pork/beef
What fish did you use? Thank you
Lamian! try addding tabon-tabon, it'll be awesome!
my dad makes raw fish all the time but he uses coconut cream. delicious especially if its snapper i like to add some sweet chilli sauce to mine. yum yum yum 😋
The chef: talks about filipino pre-colonial food
Editor: proceeds to play Spanish traditional music*
i am from the visayan region and this is the 1st time i see using coconut milk & it should have the "BIASONG" local crop mostly avalable only on vismin & no tomatoes
I am from India and recently had a taste of kinilaw, which I loved. I want to make it at home, but my mother is terrified of me eating raw fish. She doesn't believe me when I say it gets 'cooked' in vinegar."
I notice that you used white fish for this recipe. Can you use tuna?
Great vid!
We do kinilaw this way. As a bisaya. We have tabon tabon and suwa.
sarap! more of this please =) ♥
We use clean white cloth in filtering the coconut milk.
Where I'm from it's more common to use small fish like galungong (looks like GG idk what it's called). They eat the skin too. I dont eat kinilaw but I love to dip food on the sauce and pour it on rice.