Bagoong alamang
Shrimp paste in
Dumaguete, Negros Oriental, Philippines
Bagoong alamang or "Ginamos" (in Western Visayas) is
Filipino for shrimp paste, made from minute shrimp or krill (
alamang) and is commonly eaten as a topping on green
mangoes
or used as a major cooking ingredient. Bagoong paste varies in
appearance, flavor, and spiciness depending on the type. Pink and salty
bagoong alamang is marketed as "fresh", and is essentially the
shrimp-salt mixture left to marinate for a few days. This bagoong is
rarely used in this form, save as a topping for unripe mangoes. The
paste is customarily sauteed with various condiments, and its flavour
can range from salty to spicy-sweet. The colour of the sauce will also
vary with the cooking time and the ingredients used in the sauteeing.
Cincalok is the Malaysian version of 'fresh' bagoong alamang.
Unlike in other parts of Southeast Asia and in Western Visayas,
[7] where the shrimp is
fermented
beyond recognition or ground to a smooth consistency, the shrimp in
bagoong alamang (in many parts of the Philippines) is readily
identifiable, and the sauce itself has a chunky consistency. A small
amount of cooked or sauteed bagoong is served on the side of a popular
dish called "kare-kare", an oxtail stew made with peanuts. It is also
used as the key flavouring ingredient of a sauteed pork dish, known as
binagoongan (lit. "that to which bagoong is applied"). The word
bagoong, however, is also connoted with the bonnet mouth and anchovy fish version,
bagoong terong.
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