rob balucas

Catalyst. Creative. Triathlete. Speaker. Cigar Aficionado. Amateur Behavioral Psychologist. Fresh Spring Roll Addict. Paraplegic at the moment.

  • what happened?
  • updates
  • speaking
  • media
  • subscribe
  • support
  • 
  • 
  • 
  • 

powered by babaLucas

© Rob Balucas
All Rights Reserved

babaLucas filipino adobo recipe

Finally published.

My Filipino side doesn’t really make Adobo. Nor Pansit, nor Lumpia for that matter. About 10 years ago, I finally took matters into my own hands and went … where else? … Google to find authentic recipes. I came across a cookbook at a Filipino event. I watched hilarious videos on youtube.

I tried them all and made my own recipe below.

But as mentioned, finding coconut or sugar cane vinegar is KEY. White Vinegar is too strong and really sucks and just straight up isn’t authentic. Go to Ranch 99 in the Bay Area, or a local Asian / Filipino market. Pick up some frozen Shanghai lumpia too. Why not.

 

babaLucas clean adobo
2015-10-28 17:03:16
Serves 4
Clean version of Filipino Chicken Adobo - meaning using healthy ingredients and easy cuts of chicken.

Adobo is the national dish of the Philippines. Most warm-weather countries have through the centuries developed recipes that preserve food while flavoring it. This dish is different than many because of its strong component of vinegar. It is at once sour, salty, and drenched in garlic.
Write a review
Save Recipe
Print
Prep Time
20 min
Cook Time
1 hr
Total Time
1 hr 20 min
Prep Time
20 min
Cook Time
1 hr
Total Time
1 hr 20 min
Ingredients
  1. 2 lbs - Chicken, boneless skinless chicken thighs (OR add some drumsticks for bone flavor)
  2. 1 head - Garlic, coarsely chopped (yes, an entire head!)
  3. 1 - thumb-sized piece of ginger, coarsely sliced
  4. 1 cup - Organic Tamari Reduced Sodium Soy Sauce (or more to taste - or any soy sauce will do. I advise reduced sodium)
  5. 1 cup - coconut vinegar or sugar cane vinegar (this is the KEY authentic ingredient - find at Ranch 99 or other asian market)
  6. 1 cup - water
  7. 1 tsp - ground black pepper (or more to taste)
  8. 10 - black peppercorns (optional)
  9. 2 - bay leaves
  10. 2 tbl spoons - cooking oil
Instructions
  1. 1a - [optional] marinade the chicken over night. In a bowl, combine the vinegar, soy, ground black pepper, garlic, and ginger. Add the chicken OR pour over the chicken in a separate bowl and cover OR add chicken to a ziploc and pour over and seal. Let marinade in refrigerator over night.
  2. 1 - Heat the cooking oil in a large, heavy-bottomed frying pan. Lightly brown garlic and ginger over medium-low heat (about 5 minutes).
  3. 2 - Add the chicken to the frypan and brown it over medium-high heat (about 5 minutes).
  4. 3 - Add vinegar, bay leaves, both peppers, soy sauce, and water and simmer, partly covered, until the chicken is done. About 45 minutes OR as long as possible (2 hours or so) over low heat with barely a light boil.
  5. 4 - Remove the bay leaves, serve chicken over rice with a generous spooning of sauce.
Notes
  1. You can substitute pork for the chicken, or mix the two.
  2. In the Philippines it is the custom to marinate the meat for two days rather before simmering. To marinate the chicken.
  3. This dish is too strongly flavored to go well with wine; try serving it with beer.
By rob balucas
rob balucas https://robbalucas.com/

October 28, 2014

subscribe to have updates sent to you by email:

  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *