Bakun town offers chicken 'kini-ing' pork alternative
>> Sunday, November 24, 2019
LA TRINIDAD, Benguet- A new food item that can replace pork
meat for the traditionally preserved meat viand is being introduced by the town
of Bakun, one of the 13 municipalities of Benguet.
The
product, kini-ing chicken, is one of the town's featured items in the
agri-tourism fair that opened late afternoon on Monday.
“A resident of Gambang
village tried it and introduced it to the municipal hall and in a snap, it was
sold out,” Bakun town Councilor Edgar Ognaden said in Ilocano.
“He introduced it and
when we tasted, it was good. It is now regularly being sold at the municipal
hall canteen,” Ognaden said.
Several packs weighing
one kilo worth PHP190 had been sold on day one of the Agri fair.
Kini-ing chicken is only
sold on the second floor of the Bakun booth until November 23. The agri-fair is
one of the activities of the 119th Foundation anniversary of Benguet.
“It is a blockbuster
product. Some buy because they are curious while others want it because it is
chicken,” he said.
“We have enough until
the last day of the event,” Ognaden said, adding they brought the product to
the event as a pork alternative in the wake of the African swine fever (ASF)
scare.
"Kini-ing" is
a preserved meat, originally pork that undergoes smoking using pine wood. The
meat is hung above fire used in cooking at a traditional kitchen that uses wood
for three to four days.
Such a process of
preservation has been practiced by several villages in the Cordillera as a
means of preserving the meat from butchered animals, making them last for many
months, ready for the rainy season.
The Cordillera adapts
meat preservation which is all part of the native delicacy.
Whether it is
"Kini-ing", "etag" or "kinuday," they all come in
pork, which is a "necessity" during gatherings.
Ognaden said
the kini-ing is primarily added when cooking the traditional
"pinikpikan", native delicacy of the region which is the secret to
the flavorful soup.
It is also used to add
flavor to boiled vegetables, or when cooking legumes, simply sliced thinly as
an appetizer when drinking "tapuy" (rice wine), or sautéed with onion
as a stand-alone dish.
“For those who do not
eat pork, this can replace the taste we are looking for when we
eat pinikpikan,” Ognaden said. (PNA)
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