What you didn’t know about bibingka and ‘puto bumbong’ (2024)

I called food historian and award-winning author Ige Ramos to congratulate him on the victory of his book, “Dila at Bandila,” at the 2020 Gintong Aklat Awards. After exchanging pleasantries, our conversation drifted to Christmas and food associated with the season.

Collectively, we always try to find meaning in what we do, said Ige. We start certain things that through time become the norm, and later, a tradition.

The bibingka traces its roots to bebinca, also known as bibik or bebinka, a traditional 16-layer cake served at Christmas time in Goa, India.

Bebinca is made with flour, yolks, sugar, coconut milk and ghee, and spiced with nutmeg. The cake, which is more like a pudding, is tedious to make as it is cooked layer by layer.

It is believed that the bebinca was most likely brought by the Portuguese traders to the ports of Macau from Goa, and through Sumatra, to the various trading posts in the Philippines.

Our rendition of bibingka in the olden days was a flat cake made with ground glutinous rice and water. In some places, tuba was added to aid in its fermentation. It was devoid of frills, sans its toppings.

Eventually, eggs were added. It became the spongy, cake-like bibingka we know today, during the American occupation, when baking powder was added to it. It was also around this time that sugar was added.

Growing up, I remember buying it around the plaza and in front of the church in Agoo, La Union. It was cooked in a terra-cotta pot, with charcoal under, and if memory serves, a makeshift “broiler,” made from an empty milk can with charcoal in it.

Freshly cooked, the cake was slathered with margarine and sprinkled with white sugar and niyog. It was simple yet delicious.

Aside from the emergence of the terra cotta, the bibingka’s cooking vessel, location played a major role in its evolution.

In Pateros and Laguna, where duck eggs are plentiful, duck eggs were used in the batter and its by-product, salted eggs, as toppings.

In Cavite, where Ige grew up, the presence of Sangley Point, a US military base, led to its capping with processed cheese.

Of course, Via Mare’s Glenda Barretto romanticized it by adding kesong puti and lots of quality butter.

Not unique to PH

The Christmas experience would be incomplete with bibingka alone. With it should be the puto bumbong, said to have existed even before the Spanish occupation.

Ige was quick to note that the delicacy is not unique to the Philippines but prevalent in maritime Southeast Asia.

It exists in Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore and Brunei, and is also known as putu bambu or kueh bambu.

Depending on where it is made, the main ingredient is always glutinous rice in white, black or purple varieties, and almost always cooked in bamboo cylinders that whistle in a unique way when the rice cake is cooked.

Our puto bumbong was traditionally made with pirurutong rice from the Cordilleras, Central Luzon and Southern Tagalog, places where strong “celebratory” rice traditions abound. It was traditionally partaken of during religious celebrations.

Ige added that we ascribe meaning to a particular food that is seasonal. As such, when Christianity became our main religion, the puto bumbong became a symbolic treat to make people understand the meaning of Advent and/or Christianity, since purple is the color of Advent.

Add to that the fact that the stalls where it was cooked were all situated near a church, and the cylindrical kakanin feasted on after simbang gabi.

In the olden days it was made with pure pirurutong.

To cook it, the bamboo tubes were brushed with coconut oil from the latik, then once again brushed after cooking with the same, sprinkled with latik and panucha.

In the late 1950s and ’60s, Star Margarine replaced coconut oil.

As pirurutong became rare, it was replaced by glutinous rice, finely ground to make galapong. Then an even easier way of making it became possible by using Thai glutinous rice flour.

In the ’90s the cylindrical rice cakes further evolved with the addition of various flavored food, the reason many modern puto bumbong exude a hint of ube.

The toppings have also become more elaborate. Butter took the place of margarine, and grated cheese, sesame seeds, even leche flan can be found sitting atop the kakanin.

Puto Bumbong

Soak 1 kg pirurutong for 24 hours. Grind finely.

Put ground pirurutong in katsa and weigh down with a rock to extract liquid, or you may squeeze dry.

Cook in bamboo tube oiled with coconut oil. Serve brushed with more coconut oil, latik, grated coconut and panucha.

Bibingka Galapong

Enriched with rice bran Tikitiki, developed by Maria Y. Orosa in the 1920s

  • 1 coconut
  • 3½ c water
  • 1¼ c brown sugar
  • 1 c malagkit rice
  • ½ tsp salt
  • ½ c Tikitiki flour
  • ½ tsp powdered anise

Grate coconut and extract milk with ½ cup of water. Set aside. Strain.

Continue to extract milk from coconut with 3 cups of water, using 1 cup per extraction. Strain.

Add 1 cup of brown sugar and bring to a boil. Strain again.

Add malagkit rice, salt, flour and cook in a pan until the rice is soft.

Line a bibingka mold with banana leaf and fill with the rice mixture to ½-inch thickness.

Dissolve remaining ¼ cup brown sugar in the milk first extracted from the grated coconut. Add the powdered anise, and pour this over the rice mixture. Cook as you would bibingka.

Follow @iamreggieaspiras on Facebook and Instagram; reggieaspiras.com

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What you didn’t know about bibingka and ‘puto bumbong’ (2024)

FAQs

What is a fun fact about bibingka? ›

Bibingka facts. People from Dingras, Ilocos Norte in the Philippines expect a Guinness World Record. This is because they baked a kilometer-long bibingka made from cassava. At least a thousand kilos of cassava comprised the dessert.

What is a interesting fact about puto bumbong? ›

Puto bumbong is made from a unique heirloom variety of glutinous rice called pirurutong (also called tapol in Visayan) which is deep purple to almost black in color. Pirurutong is mixed with a larger ratio of white glutinous rice (malagkit or malagkit sungsong in Tagalog; pilit in Visayan).

Where did puto bumbong get its name? ›

Etymology. The name is derived from Tagalog puto (steamed rice cakes) and bumbong or bombong ("bamboo tube"). The names are sometimes mistakenly spelled as puto bungbong or puto bongbong.

Why is puto bumbong purple? ›

The purple-hued rice cake (puto) is made with glutinous rice and often cooked inside bamboo tubes (bumbong). Its color traditionally comes from a local dark-purple rice variety called pirurutong, which gets soaked overnight, then ground.

Why do Filipinos eat bibingka? ›

Bibingka is a traditional Christmas food in Philippine cuisine. It is usually eaten along with puto bumbóng as a snack after attending the nine-day Simbang Gabi ('Night mass', the Filipino version of Misa de Gallo).

What does bibingka symbolize? ›

Bibingka, a dessert made by my grandma, symbolized love, traditions, and cherished memories. The smell of baking bibingka in my oven brought up images of family get-togethers and warmth. Her kitchen was a place of love and togetherness.

Who invented bibingka? ›

The shared origins of bibingka from the Philippines and Indonesia is widely acknowledged. Especially given that the Indonesian bibingka is from Eastern Indonesia, the regions closest to the Philippines with the most closely related cultures.

What is Puto Bumbong Philippine delicacy? ›

Puto Bumbong is a steamed purple rice cake that is commonly sold during the Christmas season in the Philippines. They are slathered with butter, topped with grated coconut, muscovado, and sometimes, grated cheese or roasted sesame seeds, then wrapped in banana leaves.

What is the history of puto in Filipino? ›

No one knows for sure when it was “invented”, but Filipino Puto probably originated from the Puttu of Kerala in India, however other theories also claim that this dish could have originated in Southeast Asia and made its way to India because Austronesians are among the oldest rice farmers.

Is Puto Bumbong a street food? ›

In the Philippines, puto bumbong is sold by street vendors after Mass during Christmas week and is wrapped in banana leaves so customers can take it with them. Since we normally enjoy these at home, we just eat it fresh from the steamer… no banana leaves required.

What is a bumbong? ›

bumbóng (Baybayin spelling ᜊᜓᜋ᜔ᜊᜓᜅ᜔) cylindrical container (especially those made of bamboo) (neologism) cylinder synonym ▲ Synonym: silindro. Alternative form of bungbong.

How many calories in a piece of Puto Bumbong? ›

Other sizes: 1 piece - 340kcal, 1 serving - 340kcal, more...

Is puto bumbong seasonal? ›

While puto bumbong and bibingka are available all year long when you crave them, there's just something about these two Filipino delicacies that make the Christmas season even more special. With their aromatic smell and savory taste, they can invite nostalgic memories to your mind with every bite.

What is Bibingka in English? ›

Definition for the Tagalog word bibingka:

A baked Filipino cake made with rice flour.

Can I reheat puto bumbong? ›

Puto Bumbong is best enjoyed fresh, but you can store leftovers in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 2 days. To reheat, steam the puto bumbong for a few minutes until heated through. Serve the puto bumbong as a dessert or snack during special occasions or as a sweet treat any time of the year.

Why is it called bibingka? ›

Arsenio Manuel also noted that bibingka may have Chinese roots and its name might have been derived from the Hokkien root word “bi,” which means uncooked rice. This is the same origin for some Filipino kitchen items like bihon (noodles), bilo-bilo (glutinous rice balls), and biko (another rice cake).

What can you say about bibingka? ›

Bibingka is a classic Filipino delicacy that's especially popular during Christmas. Sold outside churches during the nine-day Misa de Gallo, it's commonly enjoyed after the mass as breakfast or as a midday snack with a cup of hot chocolate or salabat. Similar to putong bigas, traditional bibingka is made with galapong.

What does bibingka mean slang? ›

bibingka (rice cake made from rice, coconut, and grated coconut, and wrapped in coconut leaves) (vulgar, slang) female genitalia synonym ▲ Synonym: puke.

What is the biggest bibingka? ›

The bibingka is set to break Korea's record in the “Guinness Book of World Records” for the biggest rice cake. Mandaue City's rice cake is 182 square meters in area with a diameter of 50 feet and thickness of three inches. Ten metal drums were used as ovens.

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