Tocino

Tocino is bacon in Spanish,[1] typically made from the pork belly and often formed into cubes in Spain. In Caribbean countries, such as Puerto Rico and Cuba, tocino is made from pork fatback and is neither cured nor smoked but simply fried until very crunchy; it is then added to recipes, much like the way lardons are used in French cuisine. In the Philippines, tocino refers to sweetened and cured pork belly.[2]

Philippine tocino

Philippines

Tosilog, a typical Filipino breakfast composed of tocino, fried eggs, sinangág (garlic fried rice), with atchara (pickled papaya) as a side dish

In making tocino in the Philippines, the pork belly meat is first sliced into thin strips. Anise wine, annatto, water, sugar, and salt are then combined in a container to make a mixture. Each of the meat strips is then sprinkled with the mixture and then stacked in a separate container, which is then covered and kept refrigerated for about three days to cure.[3]

Tocino is traditionally boiled in water (just enough to cover the meat) or fried in oil, or is cooked over medium heat until the fat is rendered. The original tocino is marinated only with salt, sugar, and salitre (saltpetre), although pineapple juice may be added for a slightly tart flavor. The Kapampangans (kapampangan: Pindang) who make tocino mix it for four to six hours in order to achieve thickness and softness in the meat, then leave it overnight at room temperature before serving it as burong baboy (fermented pork).

Tocino is often served as the popular breakfast or lunchtime combination called tosilog, which name is a portmanteau of tocino, sinangág (garlic rice) and itlóg (egg, which is cooked either sunny-side up or scrambled).[4]

Caribbean

Tocino is cut into small squares and fried until crunchy and added to recipes like mofongo and arroz blanco con tocino, "white rice and tocino". In Cuba, it can be added to soft bread.

Spain

Uncooked Spanish tocino

In Spain, as in Venezuela (where bacon is "tocineta"), the word tocino refers to the layer of fat under a pig's skin. It is almost pure fat, and is often salted and cut into cubes. It is consumed as part of traditional recipes such as cocido.

United States

The Hormel Foods Corporation makes a Tocino-flavored version of their SPAM product for sale in super markets. [5]

gollark: Deathpenaltyless countries *do* exist.
gollark: And nonfree life and literally dying are very different things unless you fudge the definitions a ton.
gollark: If you try to escape they could probably (aim to) nonlethally recapture you.
gollark: You can do fear of imprisonment or something instead though.
gollark: It ultimately reduces to fear of imprisonment mostly. Or generalised loss of choice.

See also

References

  1. Wilson, C.; Trotter, C. (2012). The Whole Hog: recipes and lore for everything but the oink. Pavilion Books. p. pt137. ISBN 978-1-909108-37-0. Retrieved 4 January 2020.
  2. "What makes tocino an all-time favorite Filipino food". GMA News. July 12, 2018. Retrieved March 27, 2019.
  3. Lumawag, Reuel John (December 29, 2018). "A full Filipino breakfast". Sun Star. Retrieved March 27, 2019.
  4. Nagrant, Michael (December 12, 2017). "Worth a trip: This sticky-garlic-salty Filipino hangover cure". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved March 27, 2019.
  5. "Yes, there is Spam Tocino". Marketing Interactive. March 10, 2014. Retrieved May 5, 2020.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.