Pinipig

Flattened rice ingredient in the Philippines From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Pinipig is a flattened rice ingredient from the Philippines. It is made of immature grains of glutinous rice pounded until flat before being toasted. It is commonly used as toppings for various desserts in Filipino cuisine, but can also be eaten plain, made into cakes, or mixed with drinks and other dishes.[1][2][3]

Place of originPhilippines
Main ingredientsGlutinous rice
Quick facts Place of origin, Main ingredients ...
Pinipig
Pinipig toppings on buko pandan (a drink made from coconut meat, cream, and gulaman cubes flavored with pandan leaves)
Place of originPhilippines
Main ingredientsGlutinous rice
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Production

Duman rice

Pinipig is made solely from glutinous rice (malagkit or "sticky" rice). The grains are harvested while still green. They are husked and the chaff is separated from the grain (traditionally using large flat winnowing baskets called bilao). The resulting bright green kernels are then pounded in large wooden mortars and pestles until flat. They are then toasted dry on pans or baked until crisp.[4][5]

Description

Pinipig are characteristically light green in color when fresh, but usually become yellowish white to brown when toasted. They superficially resemble grains of oats, and are often confused with puffed rice. The texture is crunchy on the exterior with a chewy center.[5][6]

Variants

Cakes made from duman, a variant of pinipig from Santa Rita, Pampanga

A notable regional variant of the pinipig is the duman, which is made in Santa Rita, Pampanga in the Philippines. Duman, like pinipig, is also made from immature grains of glutinous rice, but it is toasted before it is pounded.[7]

A similar delicacy also exists called cốm in Vietnam and Thailand.[6]

See also

References

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