- Bagoong terong
Bagoong Terong or bagoong, and bugguong in the Ilocano language, is a common ingredient used in the
Philippines and particularly in Northern Ilocano cuisine. It is made by salting and fermenting thebonnet mouth fish . This bagoong is coarser thanBagoong Monamon , and contains fragments of the salted and fermented fish [http://www.recipetips.com/glossary-term/t--38061/bagoong.asp] ; they are similar in flavor. The odor is distinct and unique. Westerners who are unfamiliar with this condiment find the smell repulsive. Bagoong is an essential ingredient in many curries and sauces.Fish sauce , common throughout Southeast Asian cuisine, is a by-product of the bagoong process. [http://allrecipes.com/HowTo/bagoong/Detail.aspx] Known in the Philippines as "patis", it is distinguished as the clear refined layer floating on the thicker bagoong. Patis and bagoong can be interchanged in recipes, depending on personal taste and preference.Bagoong is used as a flavor enhancing agent in the place of
salt ,soy sauce , ormonosodium glutamate (MSG). It is used to make a fish stock, the base of many Ilocano dishes, such aspinakbet ,dinengdeng ,inabraw or as a dressing for coldsteamed greens in the dishkinilnat (ensalada), likefern s,bitter melon leaves, orsweet potato leaves. Bagoong is used as a condiment, or dipping sauce, forchicharon , wholefried fish , green and ripemangoes , or hard boiled eggs.It is similar in taste and odor to
anchovy paste.ee also
*
Bagoong Monamon
*Fish sauce
*Shrimp paste
*Garum External links
* A [http://www.editthis.info/wiki/Bagoong personal reminiscence] of the history of Lorenzana brand bagoong.
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