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FILIPINO SEAFOOD COOKING / Cooking At Home With Pea

πŸ“… 2022-03-18⏱ 38:32
πŸ“… 2022-03-18 Β |Β  ⏱️ 38:32 Β |Β  πŸ‘οΈ 48.2K views Β |Β  πŸ‘ 4.4K likes Β |Β  πŸ’¬ 1.4K comments

Pea takes viewers on a full cook-along from the Dumaguete public market to her dinner table, preparing five seafood dishes entirely from scratch with local ingredients. The video doubles as a practical cooking tutorial with specific techniques and a window into everyday Filipino food culture β€” from squeezing fresh coconut milk by hand to the Filipino ethos of wasting absolutely nothing, including shrimp heads and leftover coconut pulp.

Shopping at Dumaguete Public Market ​

  • Everything is fresh and alive β€” mud crabs still moving, massive squid, king prawns
  • Prices: mud crabs at 300 pesos/kilo (~$6 USD), squid at 400 pesos/kilo (~$8 USD)
  • Buys two types of seaweed: guso (crunchy, jelly-like) and luk-hot (slimy strands that look like tiny worms β€” she likes the salty, tangy taste despite the texture), at 40 pesos (~$0.80) per bundle
  • Gets a fresh coconut shredded at the market because she doesn't have a shredder at home; vendor removes the coconut water first, then shreds the meat

The menu: five dishes ​

  • Seaweed salad (two kinds: guso and luk-hot)
  • Baked scallops with butter, garlic, and pepper jack cheese
  • Beer-battered fried calamari
  • Garlic butter shrimp on a sizzling plate
  • Mud crabs in coconut milk

Seaweed salads (both kinds prepared the same way) ​

  • Diced tomatoes (she was lucky to find large ones that day), diced red onions (notes red onions are oddly more expensive than white in Dumaguete), chopped scallions for garnish
  • Seasoned with salt, pepper, and generous spiced vinegar
  • Chilled in the fridge for at least 30 minutes before serving
  • Luk-hot version looks like "green spaghetti"

Squid prep and calamari ​

  • Detailed breakdown: pull the head off, remove the spine, peel off all the skin (critical β€” leaving skin on makes calamari chewy instead of crispy), remove the flaps, slice into thin rings
  • Notes the ink stained her nails black "like an emo"
  • Beer batter recipe: approximately one cup all-purpose flour, half cup cornstarch, cumin seed, paprika, cayenne pepper, black pepper, salt, and curry powder (she likes the yellow color and taste); mix with any light beer to cement-like consistency
  • She likes it spicy and yellowish, adds extra curry powder for color
  • Fries in canola oil (her preferred frying oil), one piece at a time
  • Uses paper towel to absorb excess oil

Garlic butter shrimp ​

  • Deshells and deveins the king prawns completely β€” rants about Filipino restaurants leaving shells on and smothering with sauce that never reaches the meat, plus cooking with the "poop" still in because they don't deshell
  • Keeps the shrimp heads for broth and later eating β€” "we like to suck the head out, the brains... we don't waste anything and it's actually yummy"
  • Uses two full bulbs of garlic, pressed with a mortar (no press available)
  • Cuts shrimp into bite-sized pieces, seasons lightly with salt and cayenne
  • Cooks in olive oil and butter on high heat; adds garlic first to infuse the oil
  • Key tip: don't overcook shrimp or it gets tough and chewy, same as beef β€” just cook until it turns reddish-pink
  • Finishes with scallions, a spoonful of cornstarch water for sticky consistency, then fresh garlic and more butter at the end β€” "everything with butter is better"

Baked scallops ​

  • Dips scallops briefly in boiling water just until they open (not fully cooked)
  • Tops each with melted garlic butter, pepper jack cheese, and parsley
  • Bakes at 250Β°C for 10-15 minutes β€” notes "we don't use Fahrenheit"

Crabs in coconut milk ​

  • Hand-squeezes fresh coconut meat to extract milk β€” shows the traditional technique of massaging and squeezing the shredded meat
  • Notes this is also what they use as a hair mask in the provinces for healthy, shiny hair
  • Strains out coconut bits; leftover pulp goes to the neighbor's chickens β€” "we don't throw it away in the provinces"
  • Feels bad about cooking the live crabs β€” apologizes to "Mr. Crab" repeatedly, references watching Deadliest Catch and notes Alaskan crabs are "ginormous" compared to Filipino mud crabs
  • SautΓ©s garlic, onions, ginger, and chili flakes in olive oil and butter, adds crabs, then pours coconut milk over everything
  • The sauce comes out rich, creamy, and is meant to be eaten over rice

The feast and taste test ​

  • Lucy (Pea's friend, roommate, and camerawoman) serves as the judge
  • Pea notes Filipinos eat crabs "cowboy style" β€” bare hands, no utensils
  • Lucy rates the crabs her favorite (she always requests crabs), gives a perfect score
  • Full spread: garlic shrimp on sizzling plate, calamari ("looks like onion rings but still crispy"), crabs in coconut milk, two seaweed salads, baked scallops, and a plate of shrimp heads
  • Rice is mandatory β€” "rice is life in the Philippines"
  • Both Pea and Lucy openly enjoy sucking the brains from shrimp heads β€” presented as completely normal Filipino eating, not performative
  • Total prep and cook time: about one hour

Filipino food culture moments throughout ​

  • Nothing gets wasted: shrimp heads become broth then a snack, coconut pulp feeds the neighbor's chickens
  • Everything is done by hand and from scratch β€” no canned coconut milk, no pre-cleaned seafood
  • Pea estimates and eyeballs all measurements rather than using precise amounts
  • Spicy is a constant preference β€” cayenne and chili flakes go in almost everything

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