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- Kamayan - Wikipedia
- All About Kamayan, the Ultimate Filipino Feast - Allrecipes
- Kamayan ATL - Filipino Restaurant - Atlanta, Georgia
- Kamayan Feast: Bringing Family and Friends Together
- How To Pull off a Kamayan Feast at Home - Food Network
- How to Create a Filipino Kamayan - Allrecipes
- Eat This Filipino Feast with Your Hands - Gastro Obscura
- What’s a Boodle Fight or Filipino Kamayan Feast? - Hungry Huy
- How to Throw a Kamayan at Home | Saveur
- Kamayan - The Filipino Boodle Fight and Finger Food Feast
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Kamayan is a Filipino cultural term for the various occasions or contexts in which pagkakamay (Tagalog: "[eating] with the hands") is practiced, including as part of communal feasting (called salu-salo in Tagalog). Such feasts traditionally served the food on large leaves such as banana or breadfruit spread on a table, with the diners eating from their own plates. The practice is also known as kinamot or kinamut in Visayan languages.
While kamayan started out as a common folkway before the arrival of European colonizers, its culturally significance has become elevated in the Philippines' postcolonial culture, since the practice of pagkakamay had been discouraged by the Philippines' Spanish and American colonizers.
A separate tradition which involves eating with the hands straight off the table is the boodle fight, a tradition of the Armed Forces of the Philippines originally practiced by Philippine Military Academy cadets, and drawn from a similar tradition at the United States Military Academy West Point. The intent is to build military camaraderie by getting military personnel to enjoy the same food together, regardless of rank.
Among restaurants outside of the Philippines, however, the term "boodle fight" has often been conflated with "kamayan" and "salo-salo," and the terms tend to be used synonymously when marketing the Filipino food experience.
Etymology
The Tagalog term "kamayan" is formed from the root word kamay and the noun-forming suffix "-an" which indicates "collectivity, object, place, and instrument." Both "pagkamay" and "kinamot" mean "[eating] with the hands", from the root words kamay and kamot, both meaning "hands".
Meanwhile, "Salu-salo" means "feast" or "banquet", a reduplication of salo, "to eat together" or "to share food".
Kamayan and salu-salo
Kamayan also describes the traditional communal feasts or family meals, where rice and various colorful dishes are placed on banana leaves and eaten together. The banana leaves are washed and slightly wilted over open flames to bring out an oily sheen and then laid out on a long table. In the Batanes Islands in the northern Philippines, large breadfruit (tipuho) leaves are used instead in a serving tradition called vunung or vunong.
Method of pagkakamay
Pagkakamay describes the act of eating with the bare hands, which is the traditional pre-colonial method of eating in Filipino culture. This is done by forming a small mound of rice, adding a piece of the accompanying dish for flavor (the ulam), compressing it into a small pyramid with the fingers, lifting it to the mouth nestled in four cupped fingers, and then pushing it into the mouth with the thumb. The entire process only uses the fingers of one hand. It never uses the palms of the hands and the fingers also never enter the mouth. The other hand is not used and may instead be used to hold the plate or a drink.
Social significance
Kamayan is an informal and intimate method of dining. It has a general atmosphere of sharing, and participants usually talk throughout the meal. It does not have the strict etiquette and rules of western dining, and the dishes served depend on what is available. Kamayan may be done in private family meals or in gatherings, parties, picnics, or fiestas.
History
The practice of kamayan is pre-colonial. It has been described in by Antonio Pigafetta in the Magellan expedition, as well as by Spanish missionaries during the Spanish colonial period. While utensils like wooden spoons and ladles existed for serving and cooking in pre-colonial Filipino culture, they were not used for eating.
The practice was tolerated during the Spanish period, but it was suppressed during the American colonial period when American dining etiquette and the use of spoons and forks were aggressively promoted.
Kamayan became a particularly popular way of celebrating Filipino culture in the 1980s and 1990s, a fact reflected in the ubiquitous popularity of an upscale restaurant chain called "Kamayan."
= Boodle fight
=A boodle fight is a meal that dispenses with cutlery and dishes. Diners instead practice kamayan and eat straight off the table unlike typical instances of eating with the hands off individual plates. The food is placed on top of a long banana leaf-lined trestle table and in the true military practice, diners do not sit in chairs but instead stand shoulder to shoulder in a line on both sides of the table.
A senior officer or enlisted personnel then utters the traditional command for the boodle fight to begin:
The name "boodle fight" likely originated from the term "boodle", which is American military slang for contraband sweets such as cake, candy and ice cream. A "boodle fight" is a party in which boodle fare is served. The term may have also been derived from "kit and caboodle"; caboodle is further derived from boodle or booty.
A growing number of Filipino restaurants are serving meals boodle fight-style. In commercial contexts, the dishes in a boodle fight are arranged equidistantly throughout the table to ensure everyone has equal access. Rice are typically plain steamed white rice that is not too mushy, sinangag (garlic rice), or rice cooked in coconut leaves (puso). Typical dishes aside from rice, includes inihaw (barbecues, including lechon, whole roasted pork), lumpia, fried meats (like crispy pata), tocino (cured pork), tapa, longganisa (sausages), pancit (noodles), boiled eggs or salted eggs, seafood, dried fish, and blanched, fresh, or stir-fried vegetables. These are provided with a variety of sawsawan (dipping sauces), calamansi, bagoong, as well as pickled vegetables (atchara). Desserts are also included, like ripe or unripe Philippine mangoes, pineapples, watermelons, papaya, young coconut, leche flan, and various kakanin (rice cakes). Drinks are usually fruit juices, beer, wine, or softdrinks. As a rule, soups and stews are not included.
See also
Banana leaf
Military tradition
References
External links
Media related to Boodle fight at Wikimedia Commons
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
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Kamayan - YouTube
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Kamayan 🥘 - YouTube
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Experience Kamayan, a Filipino Food Feast Like No Other! – CHICAGONISTA
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kamayan meal | spoon&pork
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Kamayan
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kamayan
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Kamayan - Wikipedia
Kamayan is a Filipino cultural term for the various occasions or contexts in which pagkakamay (Tagalog: "[eating] with the hands") is practiced, [1] [2] including as part of communal feasting …
All About Kamayan, the Ultimate Filipino Feast - Allrecipes
Apr 20, 2021 · What is Kamayan? Kamayan means ″hands" in Tagalog — one of eight major Filipino dialects — and is a communal feast where the food is laid out on a bed of banana …
Kamayan ATL - Filipino Restaurant - Atlanta, Georgia
Address: 5150 Buford Hwy NE A230, Doraville, GA 30340 - Asian Square. Please note, Kamayan Style Feasts (pictured above) are considered private events and must be pre-booked. We are …
Kamayan Feast: Bringing Family and Friends Together
Dec 9, 2022 · The Kamayan feast, also known as a boodle fight, is a cherished Filipino tradition. The term kamayan itself means "to eat with hands" in Tagalog. During this communal meal, a …
How To Pull off a Kamayan Feast at Home - Food Network
Aug 7, 2024 · The Filipino spread, typically made of an impressive array of barbecued dishes, is best enjoyed with your hands and good company. Here are 12 recipes that come together …
How to Create a Filipino Kamayan - Allrecipes
Sep 21, 2020 · See how to set the table for a Filipino kamayan feast with author and chef Yana Gilbuena.
Eat This Filipino Feast with Your Hands - Gastro Obscura
Dec 4, 2023 · Long before the onset of Spanish colonial rule in the 1500s, kamayan feasts were popular affairs throughout the Philippine archipelago. In Tagalog, the word “kamayan” quite …
What’s a Boodle Fight or Filipino Kamayan Feast? - Hungry Huy
Aug 2, 2021 · Kamayan in Tagalog translates to “by hand,” and describes the method of eating with your hands. It’s best used during a boodle fight where you share a meal with friends and …
How to Throw a Kamayan at Home | Saveur
Nov 15, 2024 · This beginner’s guide including recipes will get you acquainted with the utensil-free Filipino feast called a kamayan.
Kamayan - The Filipino Boodle Fight and Finger Food Feast
Oct 26, 2023 · “Kamayan” means “eating with the hands” in Tagalog. Kamayan is also the name of the Filipino communal feast, also known as a boodle fight, where colorful food is served on …