Piaparan
Filipino dish
Alternative names | Pipaparan, Piarun, Pyarun, Piaran, Pyaran |
---|---|
Course | Main dish |
Place of origin | Philippines |
Region or state | Lanao del Sur |
Serving temperature | hot |
Main ingredients | chicken (or other types of meat or seafood), turmeric, onions, garlic, shredded coconut, palapa, coconut milk |
Similar dishes | pyanggang manok, adobo sa gata |
Piaparan, also known as pipaparan, piaran, or piarun, is a Filipino dish consisting of meat (usually chicken) or seafood cooked in a coconut milk-based broth with grated coconut, garlic, onions, ginger, turmeric, young wild shallots (sakurab), labuyo chili, and various vegetables and spiced with palapa. It originates from the Maranao people of Lanao del Sur. Piaparan means "shredded coconut" in Maranao and is a type of ginataan.[1][2][3][4][5]
See also
References
- ^ Heussaff, Erwan. "Regional Eats: Maranao Chicken Piaparan". The Fat Kid Inside. Retrieved March 5, 2019.
- ^ "{Eid Eats 2014} Chicken Piaparan". The Not So Creative Cook. Retrieved March 5, 2019.
- ^ Ponseca, Nicole; Trinidad, Miguel. "Recipe: Piaparan Manok (Chicken Wing Stew with Ginger, Scallions and Chiles) from 'I Am A Filipino'". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved March 5, 2019.
- ^ "Recipe: Maranao dish Chicken Piaparan". ABS-CBN News. Retrieved March 5, 2019.
- ^ "Maranao Cuisine". Mindanao Food. Retrieved March 5, 2019.
- v
- t
- e
and casseroles
- Adobo
- Afritada
- Andong jjimdak
- Ayam kecap
- Ayam masak merah
- Ayam pansuh
- Ayam rica-rica
- Bean sprouts chicken
- Betutu
- Bon bon chicken
- Bourbon chicken
- Brown stew chicken
- Butter chicken
- Cafreal
- Cashew chicken
- Chargha
- Chicken à la King
- Chicken and dumplings
- Chicken and waffles
- Chicken balls
- Chicken bog
- Chicken Chettinad
- Chicken curry
- Chicken Divan
- Chicken karahi
- Chicken Lahori
- Chicken Marengo
- Chicken marsala
- Chicken mull
- Chicken paprikash
- Chicken pastel
- Chicken Picasso
- Chicken Sukka
- Chicken riggies
- Chicken tikka masala
- Chicken Vesuvio
- Chimaek
- Chikuzenni
- Chilli chicken
- Circassian chicken
- Cola chicken
- Coq au vin
- Country Captain
- Dak-bokkeum-tang
- Dapanji
- Dong'an chicken
- Dragon tiger phoenix
- Escabeche oriental
- Flying Jacob
- Fujian red wine chicken
- Galinha à portuguesa
- Galinhada
- Gallo en chicha
- Gulai ayam
- Helzel
- Inubaran
- Kedjenou
- Kinamatisang manok
- King Ranch chicken
- Kori rotti
- Kwetiau ayam
- Mie ayam
- Moambe chicken
- Murgh musallam
- Opor ayam
- Ostropel
- Piaparan
- Pininyahang manok
- Piyanggang manok
- Plecing ayam
- Poulet au fromage
- Rollatini
- Sanbeiji
- Scaloppine
- Sorol
- Soy sauce chicken
- Swiss wing
- Talunan
- Waterzooi
- White cut chicken
- Yassa
- Ayam goreng
- Ayam goreng kalasan
- Ayam pop
- Barberton chicken
- Buffalo wings
- Chicken 65
- Cordon bleu
- Coxinha
- Crispy
- Dak-galbi
- Finger
- Fries
- Chicken Française
- General Tso's chicken
- Gribenes
- Karaage
- Katsu
- Chicken Kiev
- Kentucky
- Korean
- Kung Pao
- Laziji
- Lemon
- Lemon pepper wings
- Lollipop
- Chicken Maryland
- Moo goo gai pan
- Nashville hot chicken
- Nugget
- Orange
- Padak
- Parmigiana
- Piccata
- Pozharsky cutlet
- Saltimbocca
- Sesame
- Southern
- Spice bag
- Sweet and sour
- Tabaka
- Taiwanese
- Chicken tatsuta
- Tongdak
- Yangnyeom
- Ayam bakar
- Ayam bumbu rujak
- Ayam kodok
- Ayam taliwang
- Beggar's Chicken
- Beer can chicken
- Buldak
- Chicken galantina
- Engagement chicken
- Galinha à africana
- Huli-huli
- Inasal
- Jerusalem mixed grill
- Jerk
- Jujeh kabab
- Kai yang
- Lechon manok
- Pinchitos
- Pollo a la brasa
- Rotisserie
- Sajji
- Satay
- Shawarma
- Shish taouk
- Tandoori
- Tikka
- Tsukune
- Yakitori
This Filipino cuisine–related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e