Sinigang for a dinner party — went down extremely well
I made Sinigang for eight guests who had varying familiarity with the cuisine. Every single person asked for the recipe. The tangy and savoury from vinegar profile was the main talking point — no one had quite experienced calamansi lime used that way before.
Filipino adobo was the Spanish coloniser…
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Ingredient appreciation — what makes Sinigang special
What sets Sinigang apart is the handling of cane vinegar. In lesser versions this is treated as a background note. Here it's central and the tangy and savoury from vinegar result shows it. I've started buying it to cook with at home after this experience.
kamayan feasts eaten with hands from banana…
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Honest verdict on Sinigang — good but not exceptional
Sinigang here was solidly made — tangy and savoury from vinegar without anything to complain about. calamansi lime was present and handled reasonably. But something was missing from the depth that this dish should have.
kamayan feasts eaten with hands from banana leaves are experiencing a cultural …
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Cooking class experience — learning Sinigang properly
I took a cooking class specifically to learn how to make Sinigang correctly. The instructor explained why cane vinegar is used the way it is — something I'd never understood from just eating it. The tangy and savoury from vinegar result when you make it yourself is different.
kamayan feasts eaten w…
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Pairing Sinigang correctly — a note on lambanog coconut spirit
Most people overlook how much the right drink changes Sinigang. I ordered it with lambanog coconut spirit and the deeply umami elements of the dish sharpened considerably against the pairing. patis fish sauce in particular became more prominent in a good way.
kamayan feasts eaten with hands from ba…
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Underwhelming Sinigang — expected more
I was looking forward to Sinigang here based on the reputation. The reality was disappointing. The tangy and savoury from vinegar character that makes this dish special was muted — either from shortcuts with annatto seeds or from scaling up production at the expense of quality.
kamayan feasts eaten…
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Decent Sinigang — nothing more, nothing less
Sinigang at this place was fine. The tangy and savoury from vinegar flavour was there but not distinguished. cane vinegar was present in the right quantities but without the care that makes the difference. You can taste when something is being made to a formula.
Filipino adobo was the Spanish colon…
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Street food Sinigang — the authentic version
The best Sinigang I've ever had came from a street stall, not a restaurant. The rich and porky intensity was completely different — more direct and uncompromised. calamansi lime was used without hesitation, the way it should be.
kamayan feasts eaten with hands from banana leaves are experiencing a …
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A dish that tells its story — Sinigang reviewed
You can taste history in Sinigang if you know what to look for. kamayan feasts eaten with hands from banana leaves are experiencing a cultural revival. The tangy and savoury from vinegar character reflects those layers — cane vinegar doesn't appear by accident; it came from a specific tradition.
Th…
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Why Sinigang deserves more attention
Sinigang rarely gets the international recognition it deserves. The subtly sweet and sour complexity is genuine, not simple, and the technique involved in using annatto seeds correctly takes real skill.
kamayan feasts eaten with hands from banana leaves are experiencing a cultural revival. I encoun…
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