Aired (January 5, 2025): Isa sa mga tradisyunal na pagkaing hinahain sa Cavite tuwing New Year ay ang tamales. Ang delicacy na ito, inaabot daw ng mahigit isang araw kung lutuin. Kumusta naman kaya ang lasa nito? Panoorin ang video.
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00:00This is another New Year's staple of CaviteƱo.
00:03It also has a lot of meat.
00:05Is that not enough?
00:07Can we get rid of the ingredients that overload this dish?
00:12What is this?
00:13Smell?
00:14I can't smell anything.
00:15I can't taste anything either.
00:17I'll just explain.
00:18This is what gives the color.
00:20Chuete?
00:21Why did I say that?
00:25Small round?
00:26There is no taste of small round.
00:28Quail egg?
00:29No.
00:30It's smaller than a quail egg.
00:31Garbanzos?
00:32No.
00:34Very pasty.
00:35Kind of heavy.
00:36It's solid.
00:37It's solid, bro.
00:38So it's heavy.
00:39I thought it's like a puto.
00:40Galapong?
00:43What's the smell?
00:44When I smell it,
00:45I'll say the name right away.
00:47It's salty.
00:48It's ground.
00:49Mune?
00:51It's not pork.
00:52It's not beef.
00:53Chicken?
00:55It's not chicken.
00:56It's not beef.
00:57Pork?
01:00It brightens up those who want to be a woman.
01:02Lar?
01:03That's it.
01:04Good.
01:06It's usually breakfast in the morning.
01:09Egg?
01:10That's it.
01:11That's right.
01:12That's just a few of the overloaded and heavy-gutted ingredients of the Robinson family.
01:16But it's not just filling.
01:18It's been wrapped for almost a millennium.
01:23My husband's grandmother,
01:24Iluminada Robinson.
01:26Then it went to my grandmother.
01:28When my grandmother passed away,
01:30it went to me.
01:31The iconic food of Cavite,
01:35we thought there's only tamales in Pampanga.
01:38In fact, as early as 1900s,
01:42Benjamin Robinson,
01:43along with his wife,
01:45Sacramento Guerrero Robinson of Ermita,
01:48and she were the ones who spread tamales in Cavite.
01:54It's just wrapped for you to see.
01:56But it took me more than a day to cook it.
01:59It's peanut-based,
02:00with just a little bit of its filling.
02:02And it's used as a peppery and savory dish.
02:08It was influenced by Mexico,
02:10but somehow,
02:12the use and cooking of the ingredients evolved
02:15according to the taste of the CaviteƱos.
02:18When you're a CaviteƱo,
02:19when you grow up in Cavite City,
02:21this is what you'll look for in your food.
02:24Christmas and New Year.
02:28We opened the package,
02:31including all the ingredients.
02:33Let's taste the taste of the CaviteƱos' tamales.
02:39The CaviteƱos didn't want Robinsons to eat what they made.
02:44This is really hard.
02:45It's really well-packed to lengthen the shelf life.
02:50We tasted it here in Pampanga,
02:52and we also tasted it in Visayas.
02:54We also tasted it,
02:55probably not in Mexico,
02:57where it came from.
02:58But,
03:01I know it has peanuts mixed in,
03:04coconut milk.
03:05Actually, I just searched it on A.I. earlier.
03:08I really forgot.
03:09But there!
03:10It was revealed!
03:12Okay.
03:13One of the ingredients that A.I. said
03:18was achuete.
03:19I can see that.
03:20No.
03:22Hence, the peanut.
03:24But for me,
03:25anything savory,
03:26I still prefer it warm and hot.
03:29But in terms of taste,
03:32actually, the garbanzos is good.
03:34Because I like hummus,
03:36I feel like the aftertaste of the garbanzos is good,
03:42as well as the peanut butter with coconut milk and hard-boiled egg.
03:47I don't know if you think this is A.I.
03:50All you gotta do
03:51is just subscribe to the YouTube channel of Jamie Public Affairs
03:54and you can just watch all the Behind The Drew episodes all day,
03:58forever in your life.
03:59Let's go!