Sinantolan

Filipino dish From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Sinantolan, also known as ginataang santol or gulay na santol, is a Filipino dish made with grated santol fruit rinds, siling haba, shrimp paste (bagoong alamang), onion, garlic, and coconut cream. Meat or seafood are also commonly added, and a spicy version adds labuyo chilis. It originates from Southern Luzon, particularly from the Quezon, Laguna, and Bicol regions. It is a type of ginataan.[1][2]

Alternative namesginataang santol,
gulay na santol,
gulayon na santol,
giniling na santol,
sinantulan,
santolan,
sinantol
Place of originPhilippines
Region or stateSouthern Luzon
Quick facts Alternative names, Course ...
Sinantolan
Alternative namesginataang santol,
gulay na santol,
gulayon na santol,
giniling na santol,
sinantulan,
santolan,
sinantol
CourseMain course
Place of originPhilippines
Region or stateSouthern Luzon
Serving temperatureHot
Main ingredientssantol rinds, coconut cream, siling haba, shrimp paste, onion, garlic, meat or seafood
  •   Media: Sinantolan
Close

Names

Sinantolan (also sinantulan or santolan) means "done with santol". It is also known as gulay na santol or gulayon na santol ("vegetable santol"), ginataang santol ("santol ginataan"), and giniling na santol ("ground santol").

See also

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI