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Filipino-Style Spiced Vinegar

4.3

(3)

Two glass bottles filled with chile vinegar surrounded by more Filipino produce.
Photo by Justin Walker

Filipino food is always served with condiments within easy reach, even at a street vendor where you stand and eat. These condiments let diners customize the flavor of the meal in the form of a self-mixed dipping sauce, which is generally known as sawsawan. Diners get individual bowls and use their spoons or forks to mash chiles with vinegar as they see fit, or stir together patis and calamansi, or make whatever sawsawan they prefer. Store this version—an all-purpose sweet-and-spicy vinegar—in clean mason jars or keep it in repurposed glass bottles. Note that this recipe can be adjusted as you like—try using different chiles or other spices like bay leaf.

Recipe information

  • Yield

    Makes 3 cups (720 ml)

Ingredients

10 garlic cloves, peeled and sliced
1/4 cup (35 g) dried fruit, such as raisins, cherries, or mangos (optional)
5 whole bird’s-eye chiles
1 (3-inch/7.5 cm) knob fresh ginger, scrubbed and minced
1 tablespoon whole black peppercorns
3 to 4 cups (720 ml to 1 L) white sugarcane vinegar
1/4 cup (60 ml) fish sauce

Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Put the garlic, dried fruit, chiles, ginger, and peppercorns in a clean glass jar or bottle and cover with the vinegar and fish sauce. Loosely cover or cap the jar and let sit at room temperature in a dark place for 48 hours.

    Step 2

    Transfer the jar to the refrigerator. The pinakurat will keep indefinitely, and the flavors will continue to develop over time.

Cover of I Am a Filipino cookbook featuring a banquet table covered with banana leaves and bowls of traditional dishes and ingredients.
Excerpted from I Am a Filipino: And This Is How We Cook by Nicole Ponseca and Miguel Trinidad (Artisan Books). Copyright © 2018. Buy the full book from Amazon.

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