Showing posts with label food research. Show all posts
Showing posts with label food research. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 25, 2017

Writers, historians, and anthropologists will treasure this book

Phil.Daily Inquirer photo @inquirerdotnet
2 books make a delicious survey of ‘edible history’

When Felice Sta. Maria sent a copy of her book, “What Kids Should Know About Filipino Food” (Adarna House, 2016), I expected a simple source of information for children about Philippine cooking.

But it was more than that because it kept even an adult like me enthralled by the wealth of knowledge the author provides, aided with colorful illustrations by Mika Bacani.

If millennials don’t appreciate long readings, more so children. Sta. Maria’s texts are short but replete with facts—historical, medical, cultural, geographical, botanical. Folk riddles and proverbs add to the fun.

I expected to breeze through the book, much like scrolling through my phone screen to get to the next pages. But every page and section held my attention because there was so much to absorb.

The chapter on rice explains what bran, white rice and husk are, as well as traditional cooking methods using the bamboo tube and clay pot, and the use of banana leaves and pandan to enhance the taste.

The reader is also introduced to the “rice soul,” called “umayun” by the Mandaya people of Davao Oriental and Davao del Norte.

"Another book, one that writers, historians and anthropologists will treasure, is titled 'Philippine Food, Cooking, and Dining Dictionary' (Anvil Publishing, 2016)."

Ingredients in Filipino cuisine are effectively presented. For example, Sta. Maria provides not only the scientific name of banana, but the plant’s varieties as well. She also explains the process by which sugarcane is pulped which becomes white sugar.

She even includes an Aklanon proverb on sugar (“The fruits of our labor are sweet to us…”), and a historical tidbit (“Sugarcane was so highly valued that only a leader could select who should enjoy it…”). And then a riddle about banana: “Make it a flower first or you can’t eat it.

Kitchen info

There are pages devoted to the kitchen, the author identifying old equipment and storage areas and their respective terms.

For instance, “a small cupboard for utensils and highly valued ingredient” is called “kaling” in Filipino, and that “a rack above the stove where salted fish, meat, tobacco and even kindling are hung” is called a “paya” by the Ivatan of Batanes.

Regional cuisine occupies several pages because each region has distinct cooking, terms for ingredients and dishes.

In effect, the book gives the reader the scope of Philippine cooking, as Sta. Maria invites us to appreciate the country’s “edible history”: “It is what makes us unique as a people” but “because it is so commonplace in our lives, we often forget that food is part of our cultural heritage.”

Photo by Edgie Polistico 2016
Dining dictionary

Another book, one that writers, historians and anthropologists will treasure, is titled “Philippine Food, Cooking, and Dining Dictionary” (Anvil Publishing, 2016).

Edgie Polistico, a lexicographer, compiled the many terms of ingredients, cooking and ways of eating through several regions and languages.

He says he became a food lexicographer when he started translating Cebuano food terms to English. His interest was so aroused that he started to look into other Philippine languages as well.

Polistico has a day job as an insurance employee handling the digital monitoring of accounts; this brought him to places where he became interested in local food cultures. 

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Seeing the thick manuscript by Anvil Publishing two years ago, I couldn’t wait until it was published. Polistico’s work has helped me with my own writing; I would refer to his digital dictionary when a regional term proved difficult.

But even with the book’s 300-plus pages, some terms were still not included because it would have made the publication too expensive.

Sta. Maria, who wrote the foreword, says the book is a local Larousse Gastronomique, the French cuisine encyclopedia.

Polistico says the book has been chosen to represent the Philippines in the food writing category of the Gourmand World Cookbook Awards. The winners will be announced in May.


This article is a reprint from Philippine Daily Inquirer Lifestyle Section column. See the original post here.  By Mickey Fenix Makabenta - @inquirerdotnet, Published on January 12, 2017
E-mail the columnist at pinoyfood04@yahoo.com








Tuesday, May 5, 2015

This is how I researched for my Philippine Food, Cooking, and Dining Dictionary


Methodology

The kind of research methodology employed in this dictionary varies depending on where a certain food word and definitions could possibly be sourced. There are information that can readily be gathered at the grocery stores and supermarkets, or at the food stalls and eateries in the neighborhood and the busy streets in Metro Manila and other cities across the country. My personal experience and knowledge of Visayan foods and cuisine and my almost three decades of making my first Visayan vernacular dictionary helped me a lot in compiling Cebuano, Boholano, Waray, and Ilonggo food words. Some data and information I gathered required me more effort to discover as they are rarely used in present-day commerce you have to dig like bookworms in libraries, bookstores, newspapers, magazines, cookbooks, and other publications including the virtual world of the internet. I also asked for information from ordinary cooks and chefs on how foods are prepared and what else they knew about our foods. 

My enthusiasm in language and food research even brought me to the point of going to all four corners of our archipelago where I could find native speakers and actual specimens. It is in my many travels around the country that I witnessed and experienced the daily lives and foods of the locals. My many travels in the southern part of the Philippines introduced me to the kind of foods and culinary customs of our Muslim brethren and other ethnolinguistic groups in Mindanao. When there is urgency for immediate verification or validation of Muslim food words, good thing there are Muslim communities right in the heart of Metro Manila, such as in Quiapo, Manila, and in Maharlika Village in Taguig City.  My many travels all over the provinces in mainland Luzon gave me an opportunity to discover food words directly from the natives and local residents.  My field research across the country proved to me that many provincial delicacies and country cooking, particularly in the Visayas, Mindanao, and central Luzon are least or have never been featured in any book, magazine, and any other publication or medium of mass media communication. For instance, in southern Mindanao, there is plenty of daily fare cooking, their kind of ingredients, dishes, fruits, and other food stuff that are still unknown to the rest of the Philippines. I have the same findings in the hinterlands of Cordillera Regions in central Luzon.


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My kind of research methodology  also took advantage of the advancement of information technology and the complexity of electronic gadgets in gathering, storing, and exchanging information about Pinoy food, cooking, and dining.

My self-styled research methodology helped me create this first-of-a-kind dictionary that covers many of our local and ethnic dialects, with a long list of food, cooking, and dining terms never known or heard of before by most of us. With this book, you don’t have to travel and conduct lengthy research the way I did just to find out what a native or indigenous food word is all about. The encyclopedic entries I wrote in my dictionary would help capture the imagination closest to the real thing and enrich our knowledge and awareness of what else we have in this country. It does not serve merely as a reference but also helps preserve and share Pinoy food culture, traditions, and practices. This makes my dictionary more interesting to read and to own a copy.


Sources of information

  1. Personal experience and knowledge

My personal experience and knowledge of Visayan words being a native speaker helped a lot in almost three decades of compiling my first vernacular dictionary, the Cebuano-English Dictionary. My 20 years of stay in Metro Manila exposed me to a lot of Tagalog words and the kind of food and dining places you find in this metropolis. I’m also into cooking Pinoy dishes where I learned more about the simplicity, intricacy, and versatility of our foods and tastes.

  1. Interviews and insights from cooks and other informants

In various parts of the country, I also Interviewed, though informally, ordinary cooks and chefs about their cooking. I also interviewed those who have tried a kind of food for their insights and comments about the food. Having been to many food exhibits and festival celebrations in the provinces and in Metro Manila, I learned from my informants what are those foods considered by Filipinos as panghandaan (food for special occasions), pambahay (home-cooking food), and pagrestoran (ideally sold or served in restaurants). I realized in my many interviews that in rural areas, food for them is classified into pangkaing pangmayaman (affordable only by those who are rich) and pagkaing pangmahirap (what the poor can afford to have).

  1. Printed materials

My personal collection of various indigenous and cultural dictionaries is my most treasured depository of written literature, word bank, and semantics. My daily newspaper readings kept me updated with what food columnists and feature news writers are talking about food. My fondness for visiting libraries all over the country helped me open the pages of some unpublished research papers and theses right on their bookshelves. I also mined the treasure of food and agriculture magazines. Moreover, I am not sparing any kind of food brochures, handouts, and print ads in updating my list of food words.

  1. Broadcasting media

I also picked words and information from radio and television programs that feature food, cooking, and current events. During my childhood years in Leyte, I was an avid listener to radio broadcasts from local radio stations based in Cebu. Even when I moved to Tacloban City in my college years still listened to local radio and television news programs in Waray-waray dialect and brought that habit to Metro Manila when I moved to work here. I always wake up with my radio clock every morning and listen to Tagalog broadcasts, and watched television programs featured both in English and Tagalog in the evening prime time and on weekends. Local broadcasting media regularly and consistently used local dialects and this medium of communication helped enrich my lexicon of the local dialects and stock knowledge about anything around us.

  1. Internet and electronic applications

With the advancement of communication and information technology, data gathering these years now include browsing the internet. I regularly checked information from government websites, bloggers’ posts, and posts from a circle of social networks. I also get information and data from legitimate local and international online databases of plants and animals other than my visits to the Philippine National Museum in Manila for information about the scientific names of living things around us. With modern communication technology, I can now access to online and software-application-based English and other foreign language dictionaries hosted by legitimate sites and the web-based encyclopedia. The Internet websites and social networks are my widest and fastest way of getting and sharing information from around the globe. In fact, I am now a regular food blogger.  I posted some of my works and finds in my blog sites and accounts on Yahoo, Google+, Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and Pinterest.


My workplace at home

Research methods

Ethnography type of research under the qualitative research method was largely employed in gathering words and descriptive definitions of food words from ethnolinguistic groups in Mindanao and the locals in Luzon and Visayas. I traveled a lot around the country and conducted actual interviews with native speakers in any possible location. I personally interviewed my informants/participants while in the marketplace, restaurants and other eateries, stores, trading centers, and even in the farm and the village of fishermen. I inquired and took notes directly from them of information about their kind of foods, and cuisine, as well as about their customs and traditions in preparing, serving, and eating their foods.

Visiting local places is my best opportunity of finding native speakers, printed references, and actual specimens of food, ingredients, and implements that could help me define and validate the following:

a.)   How certain words are commonly spelled in certain locality.

b.)   How certain words are pronounced by the locals or native speakers.

c.)   How their kind of foods are prepared and what are the ingredients and implements needed.

d.)   Have an actual visual description of food, ingredients, cooking tools and other implements, as well as the place and people from where and whom I sourced or found the specimen.

e.)   Experience the taste, smell, and touch of their kind of food and how it feels joining them in partaking their foods.
Red dots represent the many places where Edgie had been all these years setting footprints all over the Philippine archipelago.

Wherever I go in the Philippines, I visit any library and bookstore to search and secure a copy of any written literature on cultural foods, customs, traditions, and practices of the locals.

While in travel, I also got information from a fellow passenger or traveler while in transit or in the station.

I also took the opportunity of talking to my relatives, friends, officemates, and neighbors who are native speakers of a particular dialect to get information about certain words and their pronunciation.

A basic research method is also employed, such that I took photographs and made audio and video recordings to aid descriptive recollection and to recall some details of the interview. When possible, I brought home some specimens to further evaluate and scrutinize my findings.

Back home, I compared and validate my findings with the entries from my collections of indigenous and local vernacular dictionaries and other references that include online databases.


 Photos

Now, I will  tour you to some of souvenir photographs of places where I had been. Click the images below and you will be redirected to my Facebook account to view the photo albums.


Setting footprints in Luzon (volume 1)


Setting footprints in Luzon (volume 2)


Setting footprints in Visayas


Setting footprints in Mindanao


Setting footprints in Metro Manila

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