Beef tapa with steamed rice, over easy fried egg and diced tomatoes and cucumbers | |
Type | Meat |
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Course | Main course |
Place of origin | Philippines |
Main ingredients | Beef, pork, chicken, or fish; salt and spices |
Variations | dried or cured |
Tapa is dried or cured beef, pork, mutton, venison or horse meat, although other meat or even fish may be used. Filipinos prepare tapa by using thin slices of meat and curing these with salt and spices as a preservation method.
Tapa is often cooked fried or grilled. When served with fried rice and fried egg, it is known as tapsilog, a portmanteau of the Tagalog words tapa, sinangag (fried rice) and itlog (egg). It sometimes comes with atchara, pickled papaya strips, or sliced tomatoes as side dish. Vinegar or ketchup is usually used as a condiment.
Etymology
Tapa in Philippine languages originally meant fish or meat preserved by smoking. In the Spanish Philippines, it came to refer to meats also preserved by other means. It is derived from Proto-Malayo-Polynesian *tapa, which in turn is derived from Proto-Austronesian *Capa. Tinapa (literally "prepared by smoking") is another cognate, though it usually refers to smoked fish.
Dishes
Before cooking tapa, the meat is cured or dried and cut in to small portions thick or thin slices. As a method of preservation, salt and spices are added. After preparation, the meat can be cooked either grilled or fried.
Just like any other ulam (main dish) in Filipino cuisine, tapa is usually paired with rice. It can be garlic rice, java rice, plain rice or any other types of preparation. As a side dish, tapa sometimes comes with atchara (pickled papaya strips) or sliced vegetables (usually tomatoes). Vinegar (oftentimes with siling labuyo) or banana ketchup is usually used as a condiment.
Tapsilog
Main article: SilogTapsilog is the term used when tapa, garlic-fried rice (sinangag), and fried egg (itlog) are combined into one meal, which is served primarily during breakfast. In Tagalog, a restaurant that primarily serves tapa is called a tapahan, tapsihan or tapsilugan.
According to some sources, tapsilog and tapsihan are colloquial slang words; however, these terms are already being used by those restaurants and many Filipinos from all social strata. Tapsilog and tapsihan, therefore, may now be considered standard words in the Filipino language rather than slang.
Restaurants
Small restaurants called tapsihan (or tapsilogan) in many barangays in the Philippines serve tapsilog along with some of its spawns (see silog). However, large business establishment chains in the Philippines, particularly some fast food chains and even most hotels, have already ventured into the selling of tapa and the tapsilog due to the popularity of this type of cuisine, including the tapsilog and its variants on their breakfast menus.
See also
References
- Robert Blust & Stephen Trussel. "Austronesian Comparative Dictionary: *Capa". Austronesian Comparative Dictionary. Retrieved July 5, 2018.
- Rowthorn, Chris; Greg Bloom; Michael Day (2006). Philippines. Lonely Planet. p. 473. ISBN 1-74104-289-5. Retrieved May 31, 2009.
tapsilog.
- Define Tapsilog, archived from the original on February 26, 2005, retrieved April 22, 2014
- Define Tapsilog, archived from the original on May 4, 2007, retrieved April 22, 2014
External links
- Media related to Tapa (Filipino cuisine) at Wikimedia Commons
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