The Last Traditional Balut Vendor

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  • Опубликовано: 29 сен 2024

Комментарии • 241

  • @mae5407
    @mae5407 Год назад +43

    Pwede nilang gawing tourist destination yung shop ni Mang Teryo to show yung traditional way of making balut, para additional income na din and to keep the tradition alive. Yung one of the remaining traditional Phyllo dough maker sa Greece ganon yung ginawa.

  • @yohanleesakibara2072
    @yohanleesakibara2072 Месяц назад

    I'm a balut lover ♥️

  • @samzz07
    @samzz07 Год назад

    Sa lugar namin sa QC walang naglalako, nakakamiss tuloy

  • @xiamalcami1878
    @xiamalcami1878 Месяц назад

    Tecnique diyan...control ang temperatura ng incubator para tama ang puti sa balut.

  • @Kusina_at_Patalim
    @Kusina_at_Patalim Год назад

    Last traditional ? Where do you find your research material ?
    Ever been in Bulacan ? You will be surprised that the traditional procces of creating balut is very lively.

  • @RichardHabijan
    @RichardHabijan 3 месяца назад

    Oo ngA panu na kaya pag wala na ang sinauna..kawawa nman mga kabataan ngayon...

  • @kamotetops1572
    @kamotetops1572 Год назад

    2:06 "Ang ganda ng ilog" - You can hear that story(from the elders) in every parts of the Philippines.
    How sad our culture does NOT respect, take care of Nature.

  • @palespectre
    @palespectre Год назад +185

    I don’t even eat Balut but I am so rooting for Mang Eleuterio. We need more people like him dedicated to keeping traditions alive.

    • @silversurfer1781
      @silversurfer1781 Год назад +3

      Erwan put it perfectly, it is an ART. ❤

    • @jerardaraza3735
      @jerardaraza3735 Год назад +1

      Dito samin madami pa ring gumagala na magbabalut per night hndi sila bababa sa lima na dumadaan since malapit kami sa pateros. Kya buhay na buhay pa rin industry nila. 😊

    • @RandomUser-kg4lp
      @RandomUser-kg4lp Год назад +1

      @@jerardaraza3735 ang masarap jan sa Pateros fried itik tsaka kaldereta 🤣

  • @bellegianwaffles
    @bellegianwaffles Год назад +47

    Loved this short food documentary! Learned a lot about traditional balut making. I felt the care and thought put into the planning and making of this video. Thank you, FEATR!

  • @ceejcenteno
    @ceejcenteno Год назад +13

    It's good that FEATR got to show the artistry behind the traditional balut making. We just need to remember that technology is not the enemy here. Hindi dapat pinaglalaban ang mga trad an modern balut makers. Bagkus, dapat nating i-incorporate yung technology para mas mapayabong pa yung industriya ng pagbabalut sa Pateros. I believe that the incubator method was endorsed by DOST to people who wants to earn more sa pagbabalut, dahil totoo naman na mas high-yeilding at mas controlled and parameters sa incubator method. Sana magkaroon din ng project ang DOST to assess what kinds on tech ang kailangan naman ng mga traditional balut makers para mas lumago pa ang business nila.

    • @noellegracellabuenaventura
      @noellegracellabuenaventura Год назад +1

      I agree here. Incubators were given by DOST to promote yung balut industry sa pateros dahil kumokonti na ang balut makers doon. 😊

  • @maryannesantocildes1075
    @maryannesantocildes1075 Год назад +17

    Tatay reminds me of my papa 🥹 he's so dedicated!!! May God bless you even more.

  • @WanderNars
    @WanderNars Год назад +4

    It’s time to clean the river kaya palagi g nagbabaha kelan kaya tayo matutu mag tapon or mag recycle nang mga basura

  • @annabalinsayo2890
    @annabalinsayo2890 6 месяцев назад +6

    Dapat yung mga ganitong natitirang traditional, should be preserved and gawing educational tourist spot. 😊

  • @maryannesantocildes1075
    @maryannesantocildes1075 Год назад +21

    I love how you feature these kinds of people plus the tradition ♥️

  • @guardiangoose
    @guardiangoose Год назад +52

    It's so sad the some people don't eat balut, they are missing out a lot. Balut is one of the best egg/egg dish that I have ever tasted. It is a gourmet food in itself, it doesn't need any fancy ingredient, it just needs attention and dedication to produce a great tasting balut.

    • @ngaran2108
      @ngaran2108 Год назад

      fear factor america demonize the egg and even the Filipino food in general for generations good thing in the age of social media we have a chance to.

    • @amyserrano588
      @amyserrano588 10 месяцев назад

      That’s disgusting wow ewwww

    • @raphaelledesma9393
      @raphaelledesma9393 8 месяцев назад +1

      Oh I’m so sorry but I tried it and couldn’t get over the texture or the taste. Well at least I didn’t avoid it and tried it.

    • @patch08787
      @patch08787 2 месяца назад +3

      Not everyone will like balut. And its not sad if people dont eat it. Its just preference

    • @RR-sj6nk
      @RR-sj6nk 28 дней назад

      Everything is not for everyone...

  • @ArkiCaloyzki
    @ArkiCaloyzki Год назад +7

    I am from Pateros, and this was also our family business before (from my Lolo and Lola up to my Mom). All I can say is iba pa rin yung BALUT sa PUTI na gawa sa Pateros. I wish we could have continued on with the business, but the supply of eggs coming from different provinces, such as Laguna, Bulacan, etc. makes it hard to sustain. If only the river was taken cared of.

    • @tonyvillavilla9650
      @tonyvillavilla9650 Год назад +2

      I agree, the river has been neglected so much that it is now just a canal of garbage. I still remember my mom’s story about them swimming at the river and collecting bad duck eggs (abnoy) that floats, she’s from Ususan by the way, they share the same river system from Pateros. I only hope the government officials for both Pateros and Taguig can see the potential of this industry and revive the river. It can be done. Singapore River is one good example, it used to be a cesspool of harmful chemicals and garbage but they still managed to turn it around. Now you can again fish and enjoy the river. It all comes down to discipline and commitment.

    • @Hahahaha_777
      @Hahahaha_777 Год назад

      I'm from pateros too😂 last time i eat balut when i was 2nd high school (10yrs ago) I'm gonna eat balut this fiesta😂😂😂 to support my hometown

  • @ninap1998
    @ninap1998 Год назад +6

    erwan needs his own bigger platform the whole team behind these blends so much it shows

  • @cathborbe2607
    @cathborbe2607 Год назад +2

    Kaya pala d na maganda ang mga balut ngayon, mas maganda nga ung dating procedure

  • @AngryKittens
    @AngryKittens Год назад +7

    Ducks (as well as chickens and water buffaloes) were first domesticated by rice-farming Southeast Asians. Not by the millet/wheat-farming ancestral Chinese. The ancestors of Filipinos - Austronesians - already had aquaculture and boatbuilding traditions since at least 5000 years ago, since they lived in coastal floodplains in the Yangtze and Min Rivers (and later Taiwan) during the Neolithic period. It's more likely balut is native to Southeast Asians, and simply acquired by the Chinese when they invaded southern China during the Han Dynasty (~2000 years ago). Similar to other quintessentially SE Asian things that made their way into China, like the brass gongs, zongzi, sago pearls, black pepper, kangkong, cinnamon, cloves, taro, fermented fish/shrimp, junk sails, etc., which most people think are Chinese but are not.

    • @PineappleOnPizza69
      @PineappleOnPizza69 Год назад

      Nagmamarunong na naman. Malawak ang china tapos sasabihin mo wheat farming? Hindi lang Han ang namumuhay dun.

    • @AngryKittens
      @AngryKittens Год назад +3

      @@PineappleOnPizza69 That's your only response? "Malawak ang China"? Do you think ancient China has the same borders as modern China? Or that the non-Han people of China today considered themselves "Chinese" before the concept of modern nation-states? 🤣
      The pre-modern (and even modern) Chinese civilizations have always been Sinocentric (the Hua-Yi distinction). They believed they, the "Huaxia" (華夏, the actual Chinese people, later "Han people"), were the center of the universe, everyone around them were "barbarians" ("Yi", 夷).
      Mahirap mag-explain sa mga taong wala kahit base knowledge, pero try ko:
      The Chinese civilization was restricted to NORTHERN China for most of the Neolithic period (late Stone age). Their cultures were founded on the Huang He and Wei river regions, later extending towards the Shandong peninsula near Korea. These regions were cold to temperate. They farmed millet, wheat, and soy. "Grain foods", which they equated with civilization. They also invented writing and developed an early centralized state (a "kingdom"). They characteristically NEVER cut their hair their entire lives, which became part of what became the Confucian values later on.
      During that time, ALL of Southern China were inhabited by unrelated non-Chinese peoples whom the ancient Chinese variously called the "Yi" (夷, "Barbarians"), "Siyi" (四夷, "Four Barbarians"), "Jiu-Yi" (九夷, "Nine Barbarians"), "Baiyue" (百越, "Hundred Barbarians"), etc. The Chinese describe them in their records as foreign peoples who spoke different languages and had strange customs that even today, are still recognizably Southeast Asian. Archaeological and even genetic data also confirms this.
      On the southeastern coast of China, from the Yangtze to the modern Fujian region, lived the ancestors and later cousins of Austronesians (Aboriginal Taiwanese, Filipinos, Indonesians, Malaysians, Polynesians, Micronesians, Champa, Malagasy, etc.) and possibly also the Kra-Dai (Thais, etc.), who had a maritime culture and were rice farmers. They built cities with moats, carved jade, cut their hair short, had tattoos, etc. The early Chinese referred to these people as the Dongyi (東夷, "Eastern Barbarians"). The Yangtze region was invaded and assimilated by the Chinese Xia and Shang dynasty, resulting in the abrupt and complete disappearance of their last civilization, the Liangzhu culture. Although parts of them survived and fled to the Min river region for a time (becoming the Minyue, 閩越, "Min River Barbarians" in Chinese records), until around 200 BC.
      In the interior central regions of China, on the upper parts of the Yangtze river lived the Hmong-Mien, also rice farmers who traded heavily and had very similar cultures with the pre-Austronesian Dongyi. They built densely populated cities and were probably forming centralized true states ("kingdoms"), by around 3400 to 2000 BC. They are probably the people referred to as the Nanman (南蠻, "Southern barbarians") by the Shang dynasty Chinese. They were also invaded early on. Their last culture, the Shijiahe culture, also declined severely at around the same time as the disappearance of the Liangzhu. Their modern survivors are just scattered hill-tribes.
      On the southern coast of China, near the Pearl River basin were ancestors of the Austroasiatic peoples (Vietnamese, Khmer, etc.). Also called the Nanyue ("南越", "Southern Barbarians"), by the Chinese as their borders had expanded by then. They were invaded by the Han Dynasty around 200 BC to 200 AD. During the Han Southward Expansion (also the same period when the Han first invaded Joseon of Korea).
      Finally on the western edges of what is now modern China were the "Xirong" (西戎;, "western war-like people"), which included the ancestors of the Tibeto-Burman people. And likely also Central Asian people like the Uyghurs.
      To reiterate: these people were not Han Chinese. Not Huaxia. The majority of them were cousins of, or even direct ancestors of, modern Southeast Asian ethnic groups. Most were wiped out or assimilated during the various expansions of the Shang, Xia, Qin, and Han dynasty. It even continued into historic times, when the Chinese colonized and occupied Vietnam until around 1000 AD. Then China itself was invaded by the Mongol (non-Chinese) Yuan dynasty. And later on, the Jurchen (Manchu, also non-Chinese) Qing dynasty (who forced the Chinese to braid their hair and shave their forehead, following Jurchen custom), which itself fell to internal turmoil brought about by western colonization.
      Ducks (as well as rice, chickens, water buffaloes, etc.) were domesticated in the NEOLITHIC in SOUTHERN CHINA, when this region was NOT yet part of the Chinese empire and was home to non-Chinese peoples. And you credit the Chinese for it just because these regions are now part of modern China?
      That's as idiotic as crediting the Ottoman Turks instead of the Byzantine Greeks, with the building of the Hagia Sophia, just because Istanbul/Constantinople is now part of Turkey.

    • @albertgallanosa8600
      @albertgallanosa8600 3 месяца назад

      I think the Papuan Melanesian Aborigines came from Africa , they didn’t come from pre cultural revolution Taiwan

    • @AngryKittens
      @AngryKittens 3 месяца назад

      @@albertgallanosa8600Papuans and Indigenous Australians are descendants of the first wave out of Africa.
      But you're confusing the terms. Not all Melanesians are Papuans. The northern and eastern coastlines of New Guinea and the islands off New Guinea (Solomon Islands, Vanuatu, Fiji, Bismarcks, etc.) were settled by Austronesians (the Lapita culture). Over time, they mixed with Papuans, making them majority Papuan genetically, but still Austronesian culturally.
      The mixing happened within the last few centuries, AFTER the Austronesians had already also sailed for Polynesia. This is the reason why Austronesians in Polynesia have very little Papuan admixture (around 30% Papuan, 70% Austronesian), vs Islander Melanesians (around 80% Papuan, 20% Austronesian). You can see the difference most clearly in the peoples from the neighboring islands of Fiji (Melanesia) and Tonga (Polynesia). They look very different, even though culturally and linguistically, they are very closely related.
      Similar things happened in the Philippines, Indonesia, and Malaysia. Where Austronesians also mixed with preexisting populations of the Aeta, Ati, and Orang Asli, etc.
      In the Philippines, the average Filipino has around 10 to 20% Aeta/Ati ancestry. Similarly, the remaining Ati, Aeta, etc. have around 50% Austronesian ancestry.

    • @AngryKittens
      @AngryKittens 3 месяца назад

      @@albertgallanosa8600 Also I have no idea what you were replying to. I never mentioned Papuans. Just to make it very clear, unmixed Papuans and Indigenous Australians are NOT Austronesians and did not come from Taiwan. They crossed Southeast Asia to New Guinea and Australia in the Paleolithic, tens of thousands of years ago during the last ice age when sea levels were lower. They didn't reach Polynesia or Micronesia, though there are authors that think the Solomon Islands were settled by some Papuans before Austronesians (probably by short sea crossings).
      Austronesians are Neolithic group, they only started migrating via long-distance seafaring ships within the last 5000 years into Island Southeast Asia and Micronesia. Mixing with earlier Papuan and Ati/Aeta groups when they encountered them, but pushing further beyond New Guinea, into the islands of Melanesia, and eventually Polynesia. Westward, they also crossed the Indian Ocean and settled the island of Madagascar.
      However, Austronesians never settled Australia or the interior highlands of New Guinea. The reason is unknown, but it's likely because Austronesians tended to avoid settling large landmasses (especially populated ones), since most of their food-generating technologies required access to the sea and/or river floodplains.

  • @yowhatsup1006
    @yowhatsup1006 Год назад +5

    Channel ain't pregnant but always delivers. 🔥🔥🔥🔥

  • @kamoteking37
    @kamoteking37 Год назад +9

    Really appreciate the history of foods you guys provide.

  • @ladyvozz9355
    @ladyvozz9355 Год назад +6

    Another legacy of FEATR.
    Congratulations!
    Lagi ko talaga papanoorin ang bawat feature nyo. Ansaya maging Pinoy pag napapanood ko ang food vlog nyo. Proud Pinoy here.

  • @Neiru24
    @Neiru24 Год назад +2

    oh i see thats why the balut i eat before is not the same this is why im wondering why its different taste thats why i dont eat balut often now
    The Traditional the white stone is much smaller & tasted neutral which i think is good for beginners or newbies " foreigner " which is very hard to find today
    While incubated one have more soup sweeter,big white stone,bigger chick less yellow part now i know if its traditional or not

  • @jonascreations2119
    @jonascreations2119 Год назад +1

    The one's making the review doesn't know a thing about Balut.
    He is taking about bitterness.
    The bitter taste means the chick's bile has already developed.
    For me it's good. When the balut tastes bitter, it is more meaty and everything is soft including the white. And the fishy taste is gone.
    If the white is hard, the balut is for sure 16 days and below.
    The taste of the balut can be manipulated.
    You can add salt and MSG during boiling to let it absorbed by the egg during the process. This way, the balut will taste good.
    The hardness, softness, bitterness of the balut depends on its age.
    The taste depends on how balut is cooked.

  • @masteroogway5832
    @masteroogway5832 Год назад +3

    Notification squad!!!! Still one of the best Sir Erwann! I'm a fan

  • @keithlewis8238
    @keithlewis8238 5 месяцев назад +2

    They sounded like they were speaking Spanish with a touch of Asian mixed, can anyone explain this or what language that was

    • @HuwagSalangin
      @HuwagSalangin 4 месяца назад +1

      They are speaking Tagalog, our national Language. Derived from the word "Taga-ilog" (people from the river). Inception from its Austronesian Roots-local dialects combined with Chinese, Spanish, Malay and English language influences.

    • @keithlewis8238
      @keithlewis8238 4 месяца назад +1

      @@HuwagSalangin thanks for the info.

  • @denzotmsc3157
    @denzotmsc3157 Год назад +4

    Na idol ko kaagad si mang eluterio napaka experyenxado at dedicated sa pagbabalut! Salute!

  • @MorningThief_
    @MorningThief_ Год назад +4

    Can't wait to have balut again when I go back home.
    Although I wish the video explained more on how it's actually made, & how they get all that taste from inside the egg, how they cook it.

  • @charmmercado7765
    @charmmercado7765 Год назад +4

    Kanina pako nanunuod ng mga vidoes ninyo haha. Tamang stream lang salamat sa pagpapasaya lagi Erwan!

  • @spoonv
    @spoonv Год назад +2

    I'm interested in eating balut again, but I'll make it a thing when I visit Pateros! Happy to watch all your videos, because they're so rich with info from the source, but just enough to make we want to get out there and get the rest of the story myself.

  • @k.fr.3228
    @k.fr.3228 Год назад +3

    Ako'y taga- Taguig sa barangay na mismong boundary ng Taguig-Pateros. Masarap talaga ang Balut kina Ka-Teryo. Talagang balut sa puti. Minsan nga kasarap bang ipulutan kahit di na sukaan at asnan.

    • @marccilian8555
      @marccilian8555 Год назад

      Saan po banda yung kay ka teryo? Hehe salamat!

    • @k.fr.3228
      @k.fr.3228 Год назад

      @@marccilian8555 Kung taga-Ususan ka di mo na kailangang lumayo punta ka ng Bagong Calzada, yung kalsada tawid ng Vistamall-Taguig/ All Home. Ang bahay nya yung Red and Yellow na gate katabi ng Uno Store. Di ka na aabot ng Alta Guia. Wholesale ata bentahan nila, pero may mangbabalut kaming binibilhan na kina Ka-Teryo kumukuha

    • @aavstudios2956
      @aavstudios2956 Год назад

      Pano po mag order sa kanila mam?

    • @patsuarez-lx3rr
      @patsuarez-lx3rr Год назад

      @@k.fr.3228 baka meron ka contact # ni ka Teryo & kung ano ang name mismo ng kanyang balutan. Salamat

  • @martinb6065
    @martinb6065 Год назад +2

    Teach me how to Domo.

  • @gerrymarkgubantes9872
    @gerrymarkgubantes9872 Год назад +3

    sobrang solid talaga mga ganitong content from featr

  • @thefailingstudent
    @thefailingstudent Год назад +2

    is there a way we can get a more in-depth way of making balut the traditional way? actually this series have kept me wondering, how would we keep these traditional way of making ingredients alive.

  • @monicabagonamarkande
    @monicabagonamarkande Год назад +3

    Wow! Didn't know that our traditional Balut is so meticulously hard to make! I have even more respect to Balut vendors and makers now. I love Balut!

  • @aaronmanuel841
    @aaronmanuel841 Год назад +1

    ung sa sabaw, i think it's about the way they cook the egg, not necessarily the way it's taken care of... hindi mo kasi pwedeng isabay ng cooking time ung 2 balut lalo na ung traditional way ay may masmalaking or mas whole ung loob.

  • @yangluvslyf17
    @yangluvslyf17 Год назад +1

    My family and I loves balut. I grew up eating traditionally made balut and we always get 18 days over 17 or 16. We have a go to place, Carmen, Davao del Norte. i miss those days. I am so happy to watch this.

  • @shirokanzaki15
    @shirokanzaki15 Год назад +1

    hmmm ang sarap panoorin... lalo na't balut ang usapan hehe new sub here

  • @jimbryansalada2283
    @jimbryansalada2283 Год назад +2

    i would love to try the traditional one :3

  • @johngo3715
    @johngo3715 Год назад +1

    I love balut but funnily my fondest memory was eating a penoy.

  • @Mario-h8x1q
    @Mario-h8x1q 5 месяцев назад

    Hindi ko po nmn pinepersonal ito pero halos lahat na yata ng ILOG dito ay naging NAPAKARUMI na mula ng may mga nag-SQUAT sa tabi ng ilog. Ang tanong ko po ay SINO ang mga NAGTAYO ng bahay sa mga tabi ng ilog na syang naging pangunahin dahilan ng pagkaBABOY ng mga ilog...

  • @albertgallanosa8600
    @albertgallanosa8600 11 дней назад

    Ancient Filipino Stem Cell Therapy
    Along with Dinuguan that’s why we look young forever

  • @mal5043
    @mal5043 Год назад +1

    out of topic pero ang ganda ni nanay luisa sksksk the skiiin

  • @redbull1749
    @redbull1749 Год назад

    napupuna ko lang, bakit hindi yata uso ang SIDEWALK sa Pilipinas??? 😐

  • @wengearlywistle6230
    @wengearlywistle6230 Год назад +1

    Hats off to FEATR and the people behind these videos brings lots of Memories. This reminds me of the once famous Balutan in Binangonan, Rizal Brgy. Bilibiran to be exact owned by the Chong Family, they use both method traditional and the incubator type.

  • @lanileiu.5931
    @lanileiu.5931 Год назад +1

    One has to show both sides of the coin to make an informed decision. Great job FEATR

  • @acereyes9407
    @acereyes9407 Год назад +1

    Traditional balut is the best!👍

  • @rosedelacruz6460
    @rosedelacruz6460 Год назад

    Baka puede po makahingi NG contact number paano omorder NG balut wholesale po salamat

  • @shcc2742
    @shcc2742 7 месяцев назад

    neglecting the incubation process, some factors that i think might affect the taste of balut is... through the light inspection since they're depending on the size of the egg white(bato) size - that could possibly contribute to the sweetness or bitterness of the balut, the family of duck eggs used - it might fall under the breed of the duck and/or how they're raised, and on how they're cooked.

  • @SonGoku-gh2vx
    @SonGoku-gh2vx Год назад

    25 pesos kada isang balut sa amin. Comment your balut price here.

  • @jules4433
    @jules4433 2 месяца назад

    I don’t eat balut before and i prefer penoy. and then i have the gut to try it just the small ones with sisiw, the taste was not bad i like the sabaw and eat the part that has still yolk(?). No regrets! definitely must try❤😊

  • @dudleysmom100
    @dudleysmom100 Год назад +1

    Love this. My dad was from Pateros and grew up with balut and penoy although I didn’t get the courage to eat the chick until I was an adult!

  • @bikolana1022
    @bikolana1022 Год назад

    i love balut.i can eat 6 in one sitting.❤❤❤😂😅😊

  • @TabetaTolentino
    @TabetaTolentino 10 месяцев назад

    location nyo po Madam...gusto ko po bumili ng maraming balut paninda po...

  • @CookingBackyardVlogs
    @CookingBackyardVlogs 8 месяцев назад

    Mas ok traditional haha walang tapon , syempre dun ka bnili bnyaran mo ng buo sympre kkainin mo dpt buo hahaha lugi la pg ung sa incubator anlaki ng bato nyan sayang pera

  • @elyusmechanicalengineering8898
    @elyusmechanicalengineering8898 10 месяцев назад

    This channel looks like the food documentaries on GMA-7.

  • @demydeguzman1814
    @demydeguzman1814 Год назад

    Dati maganda at masarap balut pateros pero ngayon dina kasi hango bila wala panahon. Maliit sisiw malaki bato . Dia ako bumibili ng balot patwros.

  • @RichardHabijan
    @RichardHabijan 3 месяца назад

    Gusto ko yung balot. Mga bata ngqyon prito mo yung hot dog meow diba

  • @LeodyGanda
    @LeodyGanda 2 месяца назад

    i love u na Erwan... nagkaroon ako ng libangan na panoodin. ayaw ko na kasi mag fb e. kaya youtube nalang

  • @doldi5400
    @doldi5400 3 месяца назад

    Permira, sigunda, tirsira, pag may bumili kwarta.

  • @lakbaypalaboy7505
    @lakbaypalaboy7505 6 месяцев назад

    Hello dear, this is great upload as always, thank you for keep sharing new update as always, this is great for watching and sharing, keep safe and stay connected..;

  • @seda3586
    @seda3586 Год назад +1

    Baluuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuut

  • @hajime2220
    @hajime2220 Год назад

    Dadayo Jan Taga Bulacan para hatiran kayo ng itlog, hnd dadayo para sa balot hahaha, Dami Kaya d2 nyan

  • @marygracebrinas73
    @marygracebrinas73 Год назад

    I miss eating Abnoy, kahit mabaho masarap kainin .. 😁

  • @prkchoptv8663
    @prkchoptv8663 Год назад

    Some what clickbait! ....he is the only one you found using traditional balut making in "PATEROS TAGUIG". Try going to ilocos, tuguegarao, vizcaya, abra etc its the same. More could be found in far flung areas/provinces. Surely not the "LAST".

  • @mhonpermejo84
    @mhonpermejo84 Год назад

    kea pala me nakakain ako na halos sisiw na at meron nmn kaen lahat mas gusto ko ung traditional ung lasa nmn pede nmn lagyan suka or asin thanks featr now i know

  • @jakegarcia2304
    @jakegarcia2304 4 месяца назад

    ngayon ko lang nalaman kung ano ang penoy. akala ko quail eggs ang penoy. LMAO

  • @jemstv9809
    @jemstv9809 2 месяца назад

    victoria,laguna ang may pinaka masarap na balot 😅 at ibat ibang lutong itik

  • @roldansanchez5978
    @roldansanchez5978 Год назад

    idol magkaano ang balot dyan ngayon kasi gusto ako bumili nang balot maramihan

  • @MyBLheart32
    @MyBLheart32 2 месяца назад

    I just realized the big difference between your videos of last yr to this yr. The voice over doesnot match the filipino culture the video is showng. Sa tagalog pa...ang labo...di mo ramdam. 😅

  • @RichardHabijan
    @RichardHabijan 3 месяца назад

    Mas magaling mag turo ang old school...para sakin

  • @mum7556
    @mum7556 Год назад

    San po kaya macontact si mang terio para makakuha ng balut sakanya.

  • @czeex44
    @czeex44 Год назад +1

    Featr truly lives up to its name!

  • @PrettyKitty_210
    @PrettyKitty_210 Год назад

    When I was in Phil. I always go to Pateros, to visit my friend they lived there..So, pag-uwi ko,hindi pwedeng hindi ako bibili ng balut, 5 pesos lang siya during those time😜.Here in the US, palpak yung mga nabibili naming balut, mamatong kulang sa araw halos lusaw yung sisiw..mandaraya yung mga intsik o vietnamese or mexicans na gumagawa ng balut dito..Sayang talaga yung pera dahil halos wala kang makain, ang laki ng puti, for sure 12 days lang yun, minamadali nila para maging pera agad..

  • @olvisej1941
    @olvisej1941 Год назад

    pero sobrang mahal na yung balot ngayon noon tag 15 or 16 lang ngayon 25 na sa amin

  • @sundaycepeda9848
    @sundaycepeda9848 Год назад

    Si ate nag base sa sabaw. sana sumigop ka nalang ng sabaw sa mga balot na kinakain mo. hahaha

  • @BAOKHANHANNGUYEN
    @BAOKHANHANNGUYEN 4 месяца назад

    where do you buy the balut it is so delicoues i want to try one right now😊

  • @fokonoyt8061
    @fokonoyt8061 Год назад

    From 10php balot to 20 pesos balot . Sheesh

  • @dian-rn6hh
    @dian-rn6hh Год назад

    I just ate 4 balut from Bulacan because of this 😂

  • @BonisonChenido
    @BonisonChenido Год назад

    Sir pwd poe ba ako makabili ng sisiw na itik magkano poe sir

  • @missred2021
    @missred2021 6 месяцев назад

    My gosh
    I love balut pero ang Mahal na ngayon😭

  • @neri-catherinederueda-vn4zb
    @neri-catherinederueda-vn4zb Год назад

    Pwede ba mhaingi contact ni kuya

  • @chairapelobello6835
    @chairapelobello6835 Год назад

    FEATR just deliver this greatly, this has expanded what I thought I predominantly known

  • @RandomUser-kg4lp
    @RandomUser-kg4lp Год назад

    Featr so better than Tikim TV na super stretched, paulit ulit ung scene tska ung snasabi ng may-ari.

  • @danilonepomuceno4330
    @danilonepomuceno4330 Год назад

    Nice. Very informative. Unfortunately people from Pateros no longer raise their own ducks due to changes in the environment.

  • @cristubongbanua9047
    @cristubongbanua9047 Год назад

    traditional man or hindi sa suka pa rin magkakatalo

  • @orenciathomas7612
    @orenciathomas7612 9 месяцев назад

    But how do those eggs smell though? Cuz normally when eggs get to a certain stage they stink! Just asking because I never heard of balut

  • @everydayhappy2262
    @everydayhappy2262 3 месяца назад

    Jan ako nabili ng itlog na maalat. Then penoy

  • @Justinian-p1y
    @Justinian-p1y 2 месяца назад

    Naalala ko tuloy balut business ng magulang nmen ng balut noon sa San Carlos City Negros Occidental kme bumibili ng fresh egg itik mula sa Canlaon City Negros simula ngaun meron pa namn kso kapatid ko nalang nag business dahil sa business na yan nkatapus lahat ng kapatid ko slamat magulang lalo ky mama Carmela balut

  • @shcc2742
    @shcc2742 7 месяцев назад

    FEATR is better than TV contents~

  • @muchachitachinita
    @muchachitachinita 2 месяца назад

    *I love tatay's Passion!!! God Bless. I wanna try traditional balut 🤤*

  • @noobmaster69661
    @noobmaster69661 2 месяца назад

    Galing po ng copywriter nyo

  • @julmarbuslon4121
    @julmarbuslon4121 Год назад

    Pki balik din po salamat

  • @mgshobbies23
    @mgshobbies23 Год назад

    Best energy food of filipinos, Balut! 💓😍 the 12th day balut is the best ! I had 2 last time in West Buting, and it's so good! Put a pinch of salt,chili and you can sip the soup even the chick quickly! 😋 yum!

  • @osyoso_ilonggo
    @osyoso_ilonggo Год назад

    So yong balut ay di din originally pinoy? 😂

  • @d.k87
    @d.k87 2 месяца назад

    I love filipino food but balut😋 no way

  • @josephorlyespedido302
    @josephorlyespedido302 Год назад

    Sarap balot.. thank you fir feature balot. 🙏🇵🇭🇰🇼👼

  • @madmordigan7522
    @madmordigan7522 Год назад

    Gnyn ang ginagawa ng tatay ko hanggng ngaun balot sa tuong

  • @3にゃーん
    @3にゃーん 9 месяцев назад

    >18 days
    This is THE legit Balut!
    So many cheap imitations out there sell inferior 17 day old or younger balut.

  • @sunnymidnight1128
    @sunnymidnight1128 Год назад

    Tanungin nyo yun mga lolo nyo sa tuhod!