An illustration of a plain donut buddy smiling with its mouth open, while it rests one hand on an upright slice of meatloaf. Behind it is the whole meatloaf log, with the end cut to show the cross section. Inside the meatloaf are bits of hardboiled egg, sausage, pickles, carrots, and raisins.
About embutido (also: embotido).
History: A kind of meatloaf, this meaty dish came to be when meatloaf was introduced to the Philippines during the U.S. colonization in the early 1900s.
My memories as a Filipino-American: I loved when my mom made embutido. I knew it was happening when she bought ground meat, pulled out cans of vienna sausages, and the foil.
My mom made it with ground beef (most of the time) mixed with chopped up carrot bits and raisins, and rolled up with hardboiled egg, vienna sausages (which I really really really liked as a kid), and baby pickles.
I'd pour ketchup over it and eat mouthfuls of rice with these slices.
An illustration of a donut buddy sitting down, licking its lips, and holding its hand up to an open half of a dragon fruit with white insides. Its head is glazed pink with a slice of dragon fruit on top.
About dragon fruit (also: pitaya, pitahaya, or strawberry pear).
History: Native to the Americas (Central and South mainly), dragon fruit was brought to the Philippines during Spanish colonization in the 16th century.
My memories as a Filipino-American: I don't remember trying or even seeing dragon fruit as a kid, but as an adult, I had a taste of dragon fruit in smoothies and smoothie bowls.
Having the actual fruit was just as delicious as I imagined. The first time I had it was the red variety in Hawaii, and not only was it tasty, it was pretty on the inside: a super vivid pink.
Dragon fruit is up there on my list of favorite fruits (along with mango, melon, and pear).
#Donutober x #FAHM:
Flavor 29: Embutido 🍖
Flavor 30: Dragon Fruit 🐉