Category Archives: Market

Bisugo

Muslim Women Vendors

Muslim women sellers in Tamu Kianggeh, Bandar Seri Begawan.

image

Lady selling palm fronds for packaging food such as ketupat

image

Lady selling vegetables such as cassava leaves which is the primary ingredient of pucuk ubi, their version of ginataang gulay and it was very savory

image

Lady selling an assortment of edibles such as kuih cincin and non-edibles such as barut, a cloth bandage to treat abdominal ailments by wrapping around the abdominal area smeared with herbal medicine

image

Lady selling dried fish fry and dried shrimp fry

Palengke Style Longganisa

In Cabatuan public market, I came across two guys preparing longganisa (sausage) palengke style.

image

Cleaning the pork intestines by means of scraping

image

Casing of the longganisa from cleaned pork intestines. All natural

image

Adding lots of sugar and some salt into the 5 kilo ground pork

image

This is the most unappealing part - the addition of strawberry food color

image

Soy sauce is added

image

Mixing by hand

image

The mix is now ready to be made into links using the natural casing from pig intestines

Lidded Enamel Mug

I’ve noticed merchants in the market in Yogyakarta have this lidded enamel mug with them, which is actually practical.

So find the mug:

image

image

image

image

image

The mug has a character so I got one plus an enamel pot. 

image

Local Market in Jogja

While shopping arcades/malls will draw the life out of me, local markets give the opposite effect. In a larger picture, Southeast Asian local markets look and feel the same though it’s just a generality. There are detailed contrasts between regions from the atmosphere, to the quantity of certain ingredients also the variety, the tools, the merchants and patrons, the layout, the arrangement, and even the ornamentation.

I went to this food market in Yogyakarta near Prawirotaman street and took joy (as usual) in my stroll within.
image

Floor level seating is the norm.
image

I’ve noticed that there’s no market type of shouting, a contrast to the palengkera manner of calling out to shoppers (in a good way) in the Philippines where that kind of market chaos (one that I love) is eternally present. These merchants were relatively quiet in Jogja.
image

See the mangoes in that handsome timbangan (weighing scale). Also chilies, petai and sprouts in those flat round baskets.
image

The chicken lady of the market and her timbangan. I like this photo.
image

Spice pack of galangal, bay leaves and lemongrass. So unlike in the Philippines where one can see Knorr Cubes and Magic Sarap junk in the palengke.
image

Those are palm sugar inside the clear plastic bags.
image

The Indonesian cook who was with me the second time I went here says these are macadamia nuts commonly used in Indonesian cooking (but I think she meant candlenuts).
image

Timbangan in Java

They call it timbangan in Bahasa Indonesia just like in Tagalog.

image

Weighing half kilo of salak (snake fruit) at the fruit stall near Borobudur temple in Central Java.

image

The 500 gram weight for the salak.
image

Mostly I see timbangan in red.
image

Here’s a blue one at a snake fruit stall in Malioboro street.
image

Various weights on the table for the scale.
image

Weighing chili peppers, the main ingredient in lots of Javanese dishes and of course the sambal too.
image

Weighing lettuce.
image

Timbangan for the dressed chickens at the market in Prawirotaman street.
image

Benguet Coffee

One of the stalls selling coffee beans or ground coffee in Baguio public market.
image

Heavy duty grinder (that reminds me of a fire hydrant) if you want freshly ground coffee by the kilo.
image

Paroly Shells

Old Market at Siem Reap

Dry Goods

image

Usually, I’m drawn to the dry goods section in a palengke particularly the native stuff. Though some of the old school containers and implements can still be found in some  supermarkets, yet I’d rather buy from these palengke folks.
image

image

Abo Dried Fish

I grew up eating fried fresh abo in Bacolod but in Camarines Sur salted dried abo is quite common.

image

Abo tuyo at 140 pesos a kilo

image

One of the many tuyo tables in Sipocot palengke

Vegetable Vendor

Empanada of Taal

Put some filling such as meat and/or vegetables inside dough and deep fry it. When cooked, you now have an empanada. Of course there are so many variations of this deep-fried filled dough worldwide. So while I snacked on my chicken empanada Taal version, I think of the samosas I ate as starter in Indian restaurants and the curry puffs I bought for breakfast from the street vendors in Malaysia.

image

Empanada stall inside the palengke in Taal

image

Warning sign with drawing of ABS-CBN logo

Sinaing na Tulingan

Simmering tulingan for a long time in claypot saturate the fish with the added salt and souring ingredient such as kamias hence the resulting dish makes it a very appetizing viand. Locals who don’t want to spend time simmering and non-locals who would like to bring home this Batangas signature dish gave this old lady a market for her sinaing na tulingan.

image

Comfortably seated on the counter beside her palayok of sinaing na tulingan (claypot with braised tuna inside)

image

Carefully getting the fish where each one is separated by banana leaf during simmering process. The bones are very soft already that it can be eaten as proudly claimed by the vendor

image

Getting another fish. It's 3 for Php100. She then wrapped the 3 cooked fish together using banana leaf and newspaper as her packaging

Talipapa

Animal Feeds by the Kilo

Offal in the Market

Offal availability in wet markets isn’t uncommon as consumption of offal dishes in the country is very common. I had beef guts in Pangasinan as beef pinapaitan is a regular fare in that province.

image

Not a gourmet food but an everyday food in the country. Offal dishes such as dinuguan, bopis, papaitan/pinapaitan, isaw barbecue, sinanglaw, goto lugaw etcetera

Lingayen Bottled Condiments

Vegetables in Batac Market

image

Squash flowers

image

Tomatoes

image

Ampalaya leaves

image

Takway. I like this in laswa (an Ilonggo vegetable soup)

image

Kabaskabas according to the vendor. I got some and included it in pinakbet. Similar to sigarilyas in taste only better

image

Garlic is really abundant in Northern Luzon

Salted Dried Fish