INGREDIENTS:
- ½ kg buyod or freshwater shrimp, peeled and seasoned with 1 ½ tbsp salt
- meat of 5 lukadon (alangan na niyog, grated)
- 2 onions, chopped
- 2 tbsp. grated ginger
- 6 cloves garlic
- a few pieces of siling labuyo
- 20 to 25 fresh gabi leaves (should be intact with no holes)
- young coconut midrib or kitchen string with which to tie each pinangat
- 6 to 8 stalks of tanglad or lemongrass (lower white portions only), smashed
- 3 to 4 cups thin coconut milk
For the sauce/ topping:
- 2 cups thick coconut cream
- 5 cloves garlic, finely chopped
- 4 shallots, finely chopped
- 2 stalks tanglad or lemongrass (lower white stalks), smashed
- salt to taste
- 3 to 5 spring onions, finely chopped
INSTRUCTIONS:
- Combine the buyod, grated lukadon, onion, ginger, garlic and siling labuyo and chop them together using a large knife or cleaver until the mixture looks like cornmeal.
- Wrap 2 to 3 tablespoons of the mixture in two (overlapping) gabi leaves and tie each with a coconut midrib or kitchen string.
- Line a heavy-bottom pot with the smashed tanglad and arrange the pinangat pieces on top. Pour the thin coconut milk over the pinangat.
- Cover the pot and simmer over low heat, shaking it once in a while to prevent burning. The pinangat is done when the gabi leaves are already soft or when all of the thin coconut milk has evaporated.
- While the pinangat is cooking, boil together in a separate saucepan the thick coconut cream, garlic, shallots and tanglad.
- Season with salt and simmer until the mixture resembles a thick creamy sauce. Sprinkle the spring onions on top and remove from heat.
- To serve, arrange the pinangat in a wide platter and top with the sauce.
Source: Choose Philippines
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