Okoy

Okoy or ukoy, are Filipino crispy deep-fried fritters made with glutinous rice batter, unshelled small shrimp, and various vegetables, including calabaza, sweet potato, cassava, mung bean sprouts, scallions and julienned carrots, onions, and green papaya.

They are traditionally served with vinegar-based dipping sauces. They are eaten on their own or with white rice. They are popular for breakfast, snacks, or appetizers. Okoy are sometimes dyed bright orange with achuete seeds.

Okoy
Okoy
Shrimp okoy from Vigan, Ilocos Sur
Alternative namesUkoy
CourseMain course, side dish
Place of originPhilippines
Serving temperatureWarm
Similar dishesCamaron rebosado, calamares, bazun khwet kyaw, bakwan

Okoy has numerous variations using a variety of other ingredients, including replacing the shrimp with small fish or calamari. Okoy batter can also be made with regular flour, rice flour, or an egg and cornstarch mixture. It can also refer to omelettes made with mashed calabaza or sweet potato, with or without the shrimp.

Etymology

Okoy 
Shrimp okoy sold during the Duman Festival of Santa Rita, Pampanga

According to Filipino linguist Gloria Chan-Yap, the name okoy comes from Hokkien ō+kuè, meaning "cake made from taro". However, they are very different dishes. The Hokkien dish is made from deep-fried taro and minced pork, while the Philippine dish utilizes none of those ingredients. The only similarity being that they are deep-fried and pancake-shaped.

Description

The most basic traditional okoy recipe uses a small amount of galapong (ground soaked glutinous rice) as the batter, spiced to taste with onion, garlic, salt, and scallions. It is mixed with mashed kalabasa (calabaza) and unshelled small shrimp. They are deep-fried as small flat patties until golden brown. Excess oil is drained on paper towels and the dish is served warm and crispy. Okoy batter can also be mixed with kamote (sweet potato) or kamoteng kahoy (cassava), instead of, or in addition to calabaza. Other ingredients are also traditionally added, including mung bean sprouts (togue) and/or julienned carrots, onions, and green papaya. The dish is sometimes dyed bright orange with achuete seeds.

Okoy can be eaten on its own or with white rice. It is usually eaten as a snack, as appetizers, or as a breakfast meal. Traditionally, it is served with a vinegar-based dipping sauce; like sinamak (vinegar with labuyo chilis, ginger, garlic, peppercorns, and onion) or pinakurat (vinegar with fish sauce, labuyo chilis, peppercorns, ginger, garlic, and dried mangoes). But it can also be dipped in banana ketchup, tomato ketchup, sweet and sour sauces, or even garlic mayonnaise.

Variants

Okoy 
Okoy na puso ng saging, an okoy variant using banana flowers
Okoy 
Shrimp okoy with dipping sauce

Modern versions typically use regular flour or rice flour, instead of galapong. Egg mixed with cornstarch can also be used. Okoy is also used to refer to savory omelettes made with mashed calabaza or sweet potato (more properly tortang kalabasa or tortang kamote, respectively), with or without the shrimp.

The shrimp may also be omitted completely, especially when using mashed calabaza or sweet potato. The shrimp can be replaced with small fish like dilis (anchovies) or dulong (noodlefish), as well as calamari or even shredded chicken. Larger shrimp, shelled and butterflied can also be used, and can be cooked tempura-style.

The dish can be modified easily to use other non-traditional ingredients, including potatoes, bell peppers, peppercorns, tokwa (tofu), grated coconut, and apulid (water chestnuts). A unique variant of the dish uses banana flowers (puso ng saging, lit. "banana heart") cooked in batter.

A similar dish is tortang dulong or maranay which is an omelette made from very small fish from the family Salangidae known as dulong in Tagalog and ipon, libgao, or maranay in Visayan.

See also

References

Tags:

Okoy EtymologyOkoy DescriptionOkoy VariantsOkoy

🔥 Trending searches on Wiki English:

Butter (song)War for the Planet of the ApesShardlake seriesWilliam NylanderHugh JackmanList of NBA championsThe Fall Guy2024 Indian general election in West BengalJason StathamJalen BrunsonKelly Oubre Jr.List of countries and dependencies by populationPurple Hearts (2022 film)WWE Speed ChampionshipTulsi GabbardJJ RedickDamaged (film)BäckadräktenIndian Super LeagueShōgun (2024 miniseries)Borussia DortmundKu Klux KlanAdolf HitlerBaby ReindeerBullet Train (film)New ZealandList of countries by GDP (nominal) per capitaArgylleRichard Gadd2023 United Kingdom local electionsFC BarcelonaSteve JobsMother's Day (United States)Mike Smith (broadcaster)Immaculate (2024 film)WhatsAppUFC 301Chrissy TeigenCatRobinne LeeKent State shootingsGreat ExpectationsThailandAudrey HepburnJosh O'ConnorQueen VictoriaUkraineRaebareliKirstie AlleyBrooke Shields2024 Summer OlympicsBlake LivelyAerosmithWinston ChurchillSadiq KhanGame of ThronesEmma StoneBon Jovi2018 NBA draftMount TakaheShaitaan (2024 film)Fallout (American TV series)2020 United States presidential electionManchester City F.C.Rob PorterMinor League BaseballArnold SchwarzeneggerJesusBillie EilishRobert De NiroMick JaggerMillie Bobby BrownTyler BertuzziStuart BinghamJennifer PanThe BeatlesXXXTentacionBear (novel)🡆 More