How Can We Help?
You are here:
< Back
Glutinous rice and coconut dish in Filipino cuisine
Sapin-sapin is a layered glutinous rice and coconut dessert in Philippine cuisine. It is made from rice flour, coconut milk, sugar, water, flavoring and coloring. It is usually sprinkled with latik or toasted desiccated coconut flakes. The dessert is recognizable for its layers, each colored separately.[2]
Sapin means "layer" while sapin-sapin means "layered" in the Ibanag language.[3]
A traditional recipe of sapin-sapin calls for different flavors mixed in each layer such as ube halaya in the purple layer, jackfruit in the yellow or orange layer, but the white layer has no flavoring. The commercial version tends to have only food coloring and no added flavoring to reduce the cost. [citation needed]
See also
References
- ^ Chua, Philip S. (December 22, 2008). "Calories in Filipino Foods". Cebu Daily News. Retrieved January 28, 2009.
- ^ Sinclair, Charles Gordon (1998). International Dictionary of Food & Cooking. ISBN 9781579580575. Retrieved January 28, 2009.
- ^ Manila Bulletin: The Nation's Leading Newspaper : Philippine Centennial Issue : Kalayaan. 1998. Retrieved January 28, 2009.
Main dishes |
| ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Noodles and pasta | |||||||||||
Sausages | |||||||||||
Lumpia and turón | |||||||||||
Breads, cakes, and pastries |
| ||||||||||
Desserts |
| ||||||||||
Condiments and ingredients |
| ||||||||||
Beverages |
| ||||||||||
Categories
-
Annuals36
-
Bulbs, Corms & Tubers41
-
Ferns27
-
Fruits3
-
Garden Plants23
-
Grasses26
-
Herb17
-
Insects1
-
Mammals1
-
Midwest Native Plants0
-
Northeast Native Plants112
-
Perennials123
-
Rose1
-
Shrubs47
-
Trees112
-
Tropical Plants53
-
Upland Birds5
-
Vines18
-
Viola Tricolor1
-
Water Gardening & Plants9
-
Waterfowl0
-
Wetland Birds0
-
Wetland Plants4
-
Wildbirds172
-
Wildflowers1
-
Woodland Plants29
Table of Contents
Recent Comments