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 Posted By: aijaraza 
Sep 24  # 1 of 10
I'm Aileen, an avid cook, cookbook author and magazine publisher. I've been in the kitchen for most of my adult life and cooking has always been an activity my family enjoys my husband and two grown-up daughters are great cooks, too). All of us are graduates of hotel and restaurant management and my husband works in the biggest multi-national hamburger chain, McDonald's. I'm so glad to find this forum and I hope to be able to share with you nuggets of information and at the same time learn fron you, too.
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 Posted By: KYHeirloomer 
Sep 24  # 2 of 10
Hey, Aileen,

Welcome to the forum. I hope you'll be real active.

I'm a freelance writer, myself, with food and cookery one of my areas of interest. So we might have a match there. ;)

Meanwhile, I'd love to see one of your recipes for adobo. Most that are available in the U.S. are the Mexican type, which is chili based rather than vinagar based.
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 Posted By: aijaraza 
Sep 24  # 3 of 10
Hi!

I have a good recipe for adobo which has vinegar as one of the key ingredients. This recipe is a bit on the sweet side (Filipinos love the sweet-salty flavors), so you can omit the sugar if you like. The key here is marinating the pork. You can also substitute chicken, but shorten cooking time.

1 kg pork cubes (picnic or belly)
1/2 cup vinegar
1/2 cup soy sauce
1 tsp garlic, minced
water
1 Tbsp sugar
2 pcs bayleaf
8 whole peppercorns

Combine vinegar, soy sauce and garlic in a bowl. Add pork cubes and marinate for at least 1 hour (more than 1 hour if you have time).

Place pork (including the marinade) in a saucepot or saucepan. Add water to cover. Add 1 Tbsp sugar, about 8 pcs black peppercorns and 2 pcs bay leaf. Let boil uncovered for about 3 minutes so vinegary odor will evaporate, then cover pot and lower heat to simmering. Simmer for at least 1 hour (or until pork is fork-tender). Add more water if necessary.

Heat cooking oil in a skillet. Separate pork from the sauce and fry pork pieces until dark brown and a crust forms on the pork's skin (At this point, the fat will begin to spatter due to pork skin. Cover the skillet while frying. To turn pork pieces, remove skillet from fire, and using the skillet's cover as a shield, turn the pork pieces). --- Frying the pork pieces adds more flavor to the Adobo, but you can omit this step if you like

Adobo's taste improves if you eat it the next day or even a few days after. You don't even have to store it in the refrigerator as it even keeps well at room temperature. This is a favorite dish Filipinos bring all the time to picnics as it doesn't spoil. But I guarantee this recipe is so delicious, you won't have any left-overs. Enjoy!
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 Posted By: KYHeirloomer 
Sep 24  # 4 of 10
Thanks, Aileen. Sounds like a winner.
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 Posted By: Jafo232 
Sep 24  # 5 of 10
Now, can your husband tell us the "secret sauce" recipe?

J/K, welcome! :)