
last week on dr someone asked if there was good filipino food in the area.
manila cafe came up so i decided to take one for the team and go for lunch buffet this weekend with cavin and see what the deal was. it's a small place in a strip mall in springfield, va. there are 12-15 tables and while we were there, all the clientele was filipino (save for cavin and this other white boy with a filipina).
lunch buffet is $12.50 and isn't too bad. there are three buffet stations, with 6 dishes or so in each - lots of variety. i tried to taste everything, but there was too much. i tried the kare-kare (nice consistency, but bland in flavor, and i didn't like the bagoong they offered on the side - too raw), pancit bihon (good flavor, but a bit greasy), beef caldereta (great!), pinakbet (some of the veggies were a little to raw for me), laing (too salty), lechon (most of the skin was picked off already, but the meat was tender), chicken adobo (tasty with the correct vinegar:soy sauce ratio), pork bbq (kind of sweet, but tasty), fried tilapia (probably fried earlier in the day so by the time i ate it, it was dried out), and ginataan (great way to end the meal; wasn't overly sweet, with tapioca pearls). we'd probably go again if we were going out to the fairfax area. plus, i'd like to see if they change up the buffet menu, based on what they feel like cooking.
manila cafe
7020 commerce street
springfield, va 22150
703.644.5825
so, speaking of
kare-kare. last time i was at the 'rents before holiday, we went to hong kong supermarket - a mega-asian chain with stores across the country. while we were there searching for the
mama sita's lumpia shanghai mix packets, i found some mama sita's achuete powder packets, and i remembered that kare-kare uses the annatto seeds. so making kare-kare (from scratch, not using the prepared mama sita mix) has been brewing in my head for a few weeks now.
i made cavin try the kare-kare at manila cafe this weekend so that we could compare. since the one we had on saturday was bland, i was pretty sure that i could make a better one.

so after we gourged on filipino foods, we stopped by h-mart to pick up the necessary ingredients for my first-ever attempt at kare-kare. for those of you that don't know, kare-kare is a filipino stew made with oxtail and veggies, flavored with peanuts/peanut butter. some refer to it as "peanut butter soup". so i picked up oxtail, beef shank (for extra meat), sitaw (long beans), cabbage, bok choy, and asian eggplant.
we were planning to have kare-kare for sunday dinner (during the eagles/giants showdown) so i started cooking the meat saturday afternoon. basically, i washed the oxtail and beef shank, and put it in a pot and covered with water (about 9-10 cups). i brought to a boil, and then simmered with the lid on for 5 hours. (if only i had a pressure cooker! and actually? i think i cooked the meat too long, but i'll comment on that later.) i let the whole thing cool overnight in the fridge (thanks, cavin) and skimmed the fat off the top in the morning. the beef stock was most gelatinous (more than the short ribs) and later when i heated it up, the flavor was undeniably beefy - awesome! i used three different recipes, one of them being the
kare-kare recipe from pinoycook.
here is a list of the ingredients:
-2 onions, chopped
-1 head of garlic, minced
-achuete powder
-1/4 cup rice flour, toasted in pan until light golden brown (about 8 minutes)
-1 bunch sitaw (long beans), cut into 2" pieces
-half head of cabbage (cut again in half, with core removed)
-2 asian eggplants, sliced
-baby bok choy
-1 cup peanut butter (chunky is better)
-salt
-patis
-bagoong alamang (for serving)
reheat the stock and take out the pieces of meat and set them aside. add 2 tbsp oil (or some of the beef fat if you saved it) in a pot on medium high, and add onions and garlic, cook for a few minutes.
add 2 tbsp achuete powder (i used the mama sita powder, no seeds) and cook for 1 minute, then add meat and mix until meat picks up the color of the achuete. add the stock and bring to a boil.

lower the heat and add the veggies in the following order in a 3-5 minute interval (pinoycook says 2 minutes, but i found that some of the veggies weren't cooked through enough, so i'm upping the interval): sitaw, eggplant, cabbage, bok choy. i covered the pot so that some of the veggies would steam if they weren't submerged in the liquid. also, if you don't think there is enough liquid, then by all means add water.
finally when all the veggies seemed mostly cooked, i mixed 1/2 cup stock (or water if you have none left) with the peanut butter and added it to the pot, and i mixed another 1/2 cup stock with the rice flour and added it as well. the peanut butter made the color of the kare-kare lighter, which i was worried about because when i started adding the veggies, i thought i had added too much achuete powder. so just be forewarned that the broth should be darker red before you add the peanut butter. the rice flour (which i already had pre-packaged, but you could toast and grind up your own rice) thickens the soup, so you should add as much as you need, but i found i added about 1/4 cup and this did the trick. finally add salt (and patis) to adjust the salt level. up to this point, i sparingly salted when i added the veggies, but it still wasn't salty enough, so i added patis and more salt.
serve hot over steamed rice with bagoong alamang.

here is the final result! looks good, no? especially for my virgin attempt! there are a few things that i would do differently than this first time, but now i know...
final notes:
1. use chunky peanut butter. we had two opened containers of creamy peanut butter in the fridge that we needed to use up. (don't ask. i prefer chunky so i don't know why we had TWO jars of creamy. but i guess that explains why they weren't used up.) while eating the kare-kare, i missed having pieces of peanuts to crunch down on, and i just felt like it was missing something.
2. don't overcook the meat. aie. i made the mistake of cooking the oxtail and beef shank for 5.5 hours saturday night. then, on sunday while i was heating up the stock, i didn't take the oxtail out because i thought it wasn't tender enough. but, the time it takes from adding the meat to the achuete oil to the finish, is enough to finish cooking the oxtail. so when it was done, it was tender, but it was too tender. the meat had fallen off the oxtail bone, and all separated in the liquid. it wasn't that pretty, but it was darn tasty! i'd suggest cooking the oxtail and/or beef shank for about 4 hours, knowing that it will be in the pot for another 30 minutes while adding the veggies and peanut butter and what not.
3. add the entire bunch of sitaw. when i bought the bunch of sitaw at h-mart, it seemed like a lot, so i only added half. but then after it was finished, i was like, "where's all the sitaw?"
Labels: beef, cooking, filipino