Suman (food) explained

Suman
Alternate Name:Rice cake
Main Ingredient:Glutinous rice

Suman, or budbud, is an elongated rice cake originating in the Philippines. It is made from glutinous rice cooked in coconut milk, often wrapped in banana leaves, coconut leaves, or buli or buri palm (Corypha) leaves for steaming. It is usually eaten sprinkled with sugar or laden with latik. A widespread variant of suman uses cassava instead of glutinous rice.

Varieties

There are numerous varieties of suman, with almost every town or locality having its speciality. Some are described below:[1]

Suman wrapping

Suman wrapping is a unique art in itself, and can be traced to pre-colonial roots which have had contact with Indian traditions. Wrappers utilize a wide variety of indigenous materials such as palm, banana, anahaw and bamboo leaves, coconut shells, and others. Some wrappings are simple folds such as those found in the and the, resulting in rectangular suman. Others are in vertical coils like the inantala, giving it a tubular form. Still others are in pyramid-like shapes, like the balisungsong. Some forms of suman are eaten like ice cream–with cones made from banana leaves, and still others are in very complex geometric patterns like the pusu ("heart"). Some are woven into the shape of a banana blossom (which in the Philippines is referred to as the banana plant's "heart"), or the pinagi (from the word pagi, meaning stingray), a complex octahedral star.

Suman dishes (as well as savory variants like binalot and pastil) are differentiated from pusô (or patupat), in that the latter use woven palm leaves.[6]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: In Praise of Suman Past . Elmer I.. Nocheseda . Tagalog Dictionary . January 27, 2008.
  2. Web site: Sison . Jainey . KURUKOD (Cassava Suman with Coconut Filling) . Mama;s Guide Recipes . August 18, 2017 . October 5, 2019.
  3. Web site: Suman sa Ibus Recipe . December 24, 2007.
  4. Web site: Cassava Suman Recipe by Pinoy Recipeat iba pa . April 12, 2012.
  5. Web site: Suman sa Lihiya Recipe . October 16, 2013.
  6. Nocheseda . Elmer I. . The Art of Pusô: Palm Leaf Art in the Visayas in Vocabularios of the Sixteenth to the Nineteenth Centuries . Philippine Studies . 2011 . 59 . 2 . 251–272 .