First Buy: A bunch of Apples
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Next Buy: Poultry Feeds
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Next Buy: Chorizos
Chorizos are a home-made type of sausage made by mixing ground pork, sugar, and spices. A red food color is often used. Although there are already the "skinless" types, these are usually wrapped in a special casing (cleaned and dried pig intestines).
During cooking, they give out a distinct yummy, sweet smell, and once cooked, they turned reddish brown. Watch them while you're cooking because they easily burn over high heat.
Chorizos are very common to Filipino breakfast tables. Filipinos abroad cannot even resist its nostalgic taste and smell that they would usually request relatives to ship dozens of them, or if they happen to be in the country, they would never miss to put them in their list of things to bring back overseas.
Since the chorizos are here, the Chef decided to cook them for some taste test. Here's how:
Cooking Chorizos the Chef A-way!
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Basic ingredients that you cannot do away with |
2. In a frying pan, place the chorizos, water and Datu Puti vinegar. The water and vinegar combo must be just enough to dip the chorizos halfway. Cover the pan until the liquid disappears and the oily chorizo juice would start to render. (The vinegar will make the chorizos tastier and even out the "processed meat" scent and flavor.)
3. Once the pan has dried up, put some oil to fry the sausage until reddish brown. (The Chef would normally flatten the chorizo for even browning).
The finished product is great with chili vinegar sauce, fried rice and coffee. Bon Appetit!
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