Republished from the book Filipinx: Heritage Recipes from the Diaspora by Angela Dimayuga and Ligaya Mishan. Photographs copyright © 2021 by Alex Lau. Published by Abrams.”
The same dish in the Philippines may go under different names, depending on where it’s eaten and the slightest changes in ingredients, which can be confusing to an outsider (and sometimes even to us!). So: The genre of rice porridge is called lugaw, which at its most basic is simply rice boiled down until the grains lose their individual contours and become one. A cousin to Chinese congee and Korean juk, lugaw might be seasoned with nothing more than patis (fish sauce) and still soothe the soul. There are more sumptuous variations: pale honeycomb strips of tripe make it goto; with chicken and a gilding of saffron, it’s arroz caldo. I add collard greens so it’s a balanced meal, and toss in chicken wings whole, letting the bones and jiggly skin fatten the broth. Each bowl gets the luxurious touch of a Soy-Cured Egg Yolk, ready to spill its gold.