How to give your pasta Filipino flavours with Luisa Brimble

Lifestyle photographer and home cook Luisa Brimble shares how you can give pasta a Filipino touch.

Pasta with Filipino flavours

Pasta with Filipino flavours. Source: Kitti Gould

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Luisa Brimble enjoys injecting Filipino flavours into pasta. "In my head, I try to think of what flavours work. Like, would sisig work with pasta? Maybe – if it was crispy? But don't alter the carbonara. That's the holy grail." Brimble tells SBS Food.

She shares some of the ways you can add Filipino ingredients to your pasta below.
HOW TO MAKE FILIPINO-STYLE PASTA

Pasta with Filipino flavours

Patis, calamansi and chicharon

Brimble was inspired to add patis (Filipino fish sauce) to pasta because she saw how some people added soy sauce to noodles.

"Cook your noodles, then as soon they're done, drain them," says Brimble. "Put them back in the pot and add around a tablespoon of patis and a bit of butter into the noodles and toss. It's so delicious!" 

She then adds a dash of calamansi (Filipino lime) juice and chilli flakes and finishes it off with chicharon (pork crackling).
Could this Filipino staple be the new yuzu?
Could this Filipino staple be the new yuzu? Source: The Entree.Pinays
"Pork crackling takes the place of the cheese, and you know how you dip the crackling in a vinegar sawsawan (dip)? Adding an acid like lemon gives it that experience and taste," Brimble says.

"The combination is so delicious – it has umami, sourness, and crunchiness."
Longganisa

Brimble suggests removing the casing of a longganisa (Filipino sausage), frying the meat till crisp and adding it to pasta.

"Heck yeah, it would work," she laughs, adding, "I'd go for the sweeter kind of longganisa though, like the variety from Cebu or Pampanga."
The combination is so delicious – it has umami, sourness, and crunchiness.
She says that it's important to use longganisa that contains a lot of fat.

"The secret to longganisa is the fat. I'd almost say the ratio is 70 per cent fat and 30 per cent meat. Without the fat, it dries out."
Adobo

Considered as the unofficial national dish of the Philippines, Brimble shares that adobo (a stew typically made of meat, soy sauce, garlic and vinegar) can be repurposed as pasta.
"If you were to use adobo in pasta, I would forego the tomato sauce," she says.

"What I would do is use a pork shoulder and cook it almost like a ragu. I would cook the meat until you can pull it apart. Add the meat and sauce in the noodles."

Laing malunggay

Although laing malunggay (moringa leaves cooked in coconut milk) can be used as a pasta sauce, Brimble suggests replacing the coconut milk with cream or butter.

"I just can't imagine coconut with pasta. Coconut is still better with rice."

Tuyo

Brimble shares that tuyo (dried fish) can be used like anchovies.

"Just use the tuyo in small doses," she says. "Just cook it outside because that's going to smell!"

She suggests frying the tuyo until crisp, and chopping it finely before adding it to pasta. Adding an acid like calamansi or vinegar will also elevate the flavours of the dish. 

The perfect pasta dish

For Brimble, there are no set rules when it comes to giving pasta a Filipino touch.

"Just give it a go," she says. "You don't need to post it online if you fail – unless you want to be crucified!"

Kidding aside, she shares that while there are no hard-and-fast rules when it comes to cooking, it helps to keep things practical and simple.

"If you have a saucy pasta, you want the type of noodle to be a vessel to scoop up the sauce; so you can use something like fusilli. If you just want the noodles to be coated, you can use spaghetti, tagliatelle or fettuccine.

"For me, ultimately, the perfect pasta is the simplest. Spaghetti with parmesan, lemon and croutons on top – that's always good! Simplest is always best."

 

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4 min read
Published 10 October 2022 11:11am
By Nikki Alfonso-Gregorio


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