Ilokano Comfort Soup Lauya with Erwan Heussaff
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- Опубликовано: 27 июн 2024
- Lauya is a hearty soup from Ilocos, Philippines that is usually made with beef or pork knuckles and fresh vegetables. Ilokano food is known to incorporate many varieties of veggies in one dish, so you get the most nutritious and comforting meal with every bite. Lauya has many variations and we thought of making an easy version of our own.
Erwan Heussaff is back in the kitchen to try to recreate one of the best soups that he tried on his recent trip to Ilocos Norte. All you need are a few ingredients and a slow cooker and you’re good to go. It doesn’t get any simpler than this.
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This concludes our adventures in Ilocos Norte (for now!) Watch the rest of our videos on our channel:
Erwan Cook Dinengdeng - • The Best Filipino Vege...
Laoag City Food Trip with Erwan - • The Best of Ilocano Fo...
Gamet - • Seaweed Harvesters Ris...
Pasuquin Sea Salt - • Rare Sand Salt from th...
Jump to:
(0:00) Intro
(2:05) Erwan Cooks Lauya
(5:07) Taste Test
(6:32) Outro
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Just discovered you, I’m a Filipino who has lived in the USA for over 50 years, currently in California. Have to say your channel content is one of the best I’ve watched on social media. Thank you and more power to you! Love your narrative specially and admire your culinary passion.
I am Ilocano from Hawaii (there is a huge Ilocano population in the western US (especially in Hawaii) and it’s done differently as well. They use white vinegar for the broth and use cabbage and potatoes along with the General aromatics. I’ve had some family members make it with Sitaw. But this, I definitely need to try!
I have loved Lauya cooked by my uncle when i was kid. I remember it had lots of onion and a hint of ginger and peppercorn taste... now that i'm here in Spain i believe this ilocano dish came the words "la olla" which means the Pot where soups are basically cooked.
My ultimate fave food growing up is Lauyang Baka...I am not Ilokano but we, bisaya also cook Lauya and our fave is Lauyang Baka
My uncles used to cooked lauya with pig head and pig legs,they cooked it during fiestas,seasoned with sukang iloco,instead of tomato,and with green papaya as well cabbage with lots of native garlic from Ilocos sur.
YUM. Before I even watched vid I saved it to cook playlist! I cook a beef & tomato sopas using beef ribs, tomatoes and my mums secret ingredient…chicken salt. What Aussies put in their chips/fries all the time. It’s bloody delicious which is weird cause my mum is a terrible cook and I’ve never found it anywhere else Lee not even google.
To amp up the flavour I also use a crockpot, beef stock, patis, maggi and a lot of tomato paste (for major umami) in addition to the beef ribs and tomatoes and it is just incredibly scrumptious and addictive. The marrow and fat from the bones makes you want more and more.
Has anyone ever heard of a beef sopas with tomatoes and no milk before ?
Excited to try this when I return from Bali. Thank you for this recipe and series I have a little bit of Ilocano ancestry but know very little about it. ❤
The best! Lalo na kapag may kasalan, hindi nawawala ang lauya. 😍
My kind of home cooking that was a staple at our house. Thanks for featuring my home town👍
Ilocano dishes are so underrated.
UNDERRATED LIKE THE CHANNEL TSK
my Mother cooks the best dinengdeng, pinakbet, buridibud, and langka salad. it's a pleasure when there's an opp to feature. :)
lauya is one of the best dishes i have ever tasted. thank you for the recipe
This version is an interesting one that I wanna try. It is quite different from the Ilocos Sur's Lauya, of which I grew up with. Vinegar and black pepper are staple flavour of the soup.
Btw, I love these vlogs where u guys feature food from different provinces. Hope to see more🙌🏻
Your from ilocos sur? Some people here also my family we use tomatoes. Is like the pochero but have more broth
I am planning to go to Ilocos very soon and try their local food there. I definitely try lauya to compare how it's different from my region. 😅
Thank you very much for featuring our ilokano dish LAUYA - proud ilokano here
My mother's version is to smoke the pork hock from native pig for hours until the skin is a bit roasted or burnt, then boil it with ginger, onion and garlic with papaya or sayote; or boil it then saute tomatoes, garlic and onions then add monggo and ampalaya leaves.
Ilokanos love to put tomatoes in our local dishes.
I’m from the north and we never put tomatoes in our Lauya. Just braised pork or beef knuckles in black pepper and garlic, then we add the cabbage and potatoes. Salt and pepper to taste, some would also add some green chili peppers.
Lauya is cooked with ginger, some add sweet potatos or kamote to make d soup sweeter. Yan po ang difference ng lauya sa nilaga.
@@philipmarcos5934 Yes! Ilokano Lauya is basically nilaga, aside from the usual pork knuckles that we use. I heard recently that some southern version of Lauya requires some ingredients I haven’t heard of. Just like the most recent Pinas Sarap Parañaque version.
THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR THIS FEATR! I REALLY LOVE SOUPS!!! 💖✨️😊 THIS IS AMAZING! KEEP ON MAKING AWESOME VIDEOS, SO IMPORMATIVE AND MAKING FILIPINO CULTURE IN THE NEXT LEVEL!!!
Lauya in ilonggo are bony broth with a little bit of sourness from batuan instead of tomato but to each his own😅 can be with other veggies like jackfruit and sweetness and aroma a special leaf known as libas..hopefully you’ll be able to taste it as well 😅
I’ve watched this before but I’ve noticed how you word it. You just like it like the way you cook it without the cabbage which is “beautiful and naked” 😌 cue sexy music and jiggly pork hock in slow motion. Kudos to the director 🎉
Lauya reminds me a lot of my late paternal grandmother, a native of Parañaque. Her version of Lauya is also different from this. The highlight of the lauya I know is the sawsawan, which is vinegar with boiled eggplant and lots of fresh garlic. Add chilies if you're into spicy foods.
It's really interesting to know the different versions of the same food. Good job FEATR.
As someone who grew up in Paranaque I was absolutely shocked that Lauya isn't native to Paranaque and that there are other versions too! And yes, the version I know also has a super great sour garlicky eggplant dipping sauce. Damn, now I'm hungry!
I have this recipe you described in one of my cookbooks, but it's called Pochero not Lauya✌️
I like my lauya with taro and cabbagge cabbage..😍😁
ERWAN KEEP DOING THIS CONTENTS THE WORLD NEEDS TO KNOW HOW VIBRANT FILIPINO CUISINE IS , your documentaries/content deserves NCCA level of awards!! or more than that😊
I have ancestry from Ilocos and Visayas but am from the Manila area and just wish these specific dishes were available there too. Sure it’s fun to travel and experience it locally, but I can’t afford that all the time
My dad first grilled the whole pork legs just to infuse some of the oil before the actual boiling and adding ingredients ☺
#WeTheNorth would like to thank you for discovering and featuring our local cuisine in Ilocos. I'm so happy that a chef in your caliber has come through for our local dishes. THANK YOU chef Erwan. Your passion has brought you to try the very much underated Ilocano dishes, which hopefully will make its mark to the world. Agbiag ti FEATR!
I love this channel. Very informative.❤
Lauya!!!!! My favorite! 😍😍😍
Love this! Always watching your vids...
I'm excited to try this one.
I believe The red color in "dawangs" lauya actually comes from banana ketchup, but then in cooking there's is no right or wrong, what matters is the love put into the dish
My favorite dish! I cook that every once in a while for my family.😊 But we put lots of veggies. Cabbage, Saging na saba, Petchay and Baguio beans. Masarap sa Lauya pag beef!😋 And for coloring we use atsuete. We don’t use tomatoes. Super delicious!
It’s like nilaga but a little sweet coz I add sugar and aromatic because of Ginger. 😋
That’s how we make Lauya in Rizal. I learned that from my lola.
May kamote po ba yun🙄🙄
I'm looking forward to a Batanes food tour with you guys. Thank you for this.
Thank you for featuring Illocano food! Try and stop by Alaminos, that's where my mom is from
looks easy enough to do hmmmmmm thanks for the share please do more love your works here
I’m from Ilocos Norte but my mom’s lauya has no tomatoes. Only vinegar, pepper corn, bayleaf and garlic. For the vegetables she added taro root,papaya or repolyo.
Yesss
ur vlogs are very informative. thank u
Love your vlog❤️
Ilocano here👋👋👋always watching your vlog Sir Erwan🥰
Awesome! Thank you!
Sarap!
Laway much!!!missin home gravehhh!!! Ilocos norte Adams
Ilonggo version of LAUYA is may favorite😊
Bisaya version of Lauya is different. No tomatoes. More like KBL of ilonggo. Bohol also have Lauja, much like adobo from boney parts of pork. Skl
It actually varies in different municipalities here in Ilocos. Some don’t have tomatoes, some only a hint that it never colors the soup, and some have many of it.
Much like any other dishes. Probably because of the varying abundance or ingredients or lack thereof per town.
You can also try putting Taro (gabi) in your lauya the Ilokano way to make the soup thicker and the combination of it with lots of tomato is heavenly!
We put taro if we’re cooking Sinigang, together with some souring agents like sampalok.
Sinigang nkwan aa maam hehehe
Yum! Or kamoteng kahoy which is a common addition to goat lauya here in La Union.
My grandmom lauya is with vinegar,black pepper and young papaya.
Hi Erwan, I am Ilocano from Isabela and our lauya version has no tomato
Panalo talaga ang SABAW. 😋😋😋
I remember before every fiesta in our town bilar bohol meron tlagang lauja.
Was it really that easy? I love tomatoes! I'mma try this recipe on my day off 😍
I remember whenever there is santol in abundance, our lola would put in some in her lauya. It would taste really really good. Gosh, I miss her so much, and it's her birthday today as well (Feb 14) 🥹
LAUYA is a Easter Sunday dish as far as i can remember in Iligan City,Mindanao..With Luy-a , Lemongrass,Gabi(Taro)..
Lauya is very local in iloilo as well
I haven’t tried any of your recipes, there are some ingredients which are hard to find, some a little expensive. They looks yummy… i may try this one…thank you for sharing your recipes & trips.
Great to hear!
Ma try nga yang dawangs eatery were going to ilocos this week
Mas msarap nga sya pag may tomatoes..from laoag din me.. pwede din meron patatas..
SLMT po,Erwan. My lauya recipe is just a normal one with gabi or potatoes. Cool awesome.
I'm hungry now hahahaha btw, i'll cook tomorrow hahaha
Papa ko ilokano kada may pahanda di mawawala yang lauya. Syempre habhab malala ang sarap eh pati ibang ulam parehas ng afritada lupet ng kaen naimas
Im from Ilocos Norte, pero sa amin walang tomatoes ang lauya, only bawang, bay leaf, paminta, vinegar, tapos ung repolyo lang po✌️
you should do a foodocumentary about diff. kinds of lauya around the country and let me introduce our version here in Capiz. we use palm hearts, commonly coconut and buri/buli. each has it's distinct flavor. hope you can consider the thought, thanks...
all praises from my end FEAT'R Team. i just hope the content you guys put out does not stop from just putting it out there. I know it's asking a lot. maybe in the future share details on how to help those people retain their heritage by means of donations or buy their products etc. kasi sayang. these skills are no longer in practice.
the common thread I see in the interviews are that the younger generation no longer want to learn all these things. totally understandable. they see their elders having to do this for long periods of time and yield small results. they want a future with little less effort but reap bigger rewards.
if there are ways to encourage the generation of today - point them in the right resources that would help. I'm already jaded but there might still be hope the 90's-00's-2010-s generation
Very easy lang kasi yung lauya, and it has like a motherly touch especially if you have fever, itatanong lang sakin ng nanay ko kung gusto ko ng lauya
did you try sinanglaw,kinigtot or buridibod sir?
Should've tried the ''lauya with pindang na ugsa'' chef its the best version of lauya.
sadly didnt catched yu at San nicolas pub market were yu bought the bagnests.
Our lauya in Ilocos Sur we did not put tomatoes just vinegar and vegie we used is papaya or winter gourd
i hope someday you collab the harabas like wil dasovich and fam
❤
Gimasen yt ❤
Just watching Erwan pour that hot soup on that very tender pork is heaven! Yum yum! 😋
put sayote and this dish will taste even better 🤗
I wonder where he got his wide knife....i wanna get one....
Hi @featrmedia. This is just a suggestion if you're willing to make this content: Dishes that Filipinos invented to survive during World War II
im gonna copy this but I will saute the aromatics first and probably cook the tomato paste too before adding any liquid and the pork.
Laoya/Lauya varies per region.
Growing up with "luya/lauya" was the focus for the Cagayan (Region 2) version.
Food is fun and adventurous.
Here for the Recipes in the comments 😅😅😅😂 Kabsat!
Waiting for basilan vlog
Parang same sila ng KBL kaso lang yung pampaasim is kamatis sa Lauya. Batwan naman sa KBL. The way he pour the soup napalaway ako bigla🤣
Try mo na!
Now, we're talking.
🥰❤🥰❤
Sana mapansin mo to
Sa ilocos norte
May time na mahal ang kamatis.
Instead of kamatis, gumagamit kami ng semi ripe papaya for the extra sweetness
Plsss plsss can you do it for uss ❤️❤️
Did I just hear Adams? Wines are great in Adams.
Our Lauya have more luya (ginger) than tomato in Pangasinan
where can I get the FEATR. sweater :(
Lauya maysa nga kaimbagan a digo..
Lauya without luya hehehe.
yung orig tlga na lauya na ilokano paminta suka bawang lng, parang sigang na yan eh may kamatis haha
in ilokano version no tomatoe,only saging na saba,repolyo,patatas,bawang, sibuyas at paminta.thats my mother recipe lauya.
So its kinda like the pinoy version of ragù
Maybe Erwan never heard/tasted "Pork Putsero/Pochero". 😁
Pano po ba mag inquire ng tshirt at cap nyo po. Thank you
In Samar, lauya doesn't have tomatoes..
😋😋😋❤️❤️❤️💙💙💙🫶🫶🫶🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭
First
there is no diff in potchero, iba lang ang tawag nila at less veges.
milk fish
Lauya in ilocos sur don't have tomatoes. Only sukang iloco
Lauya is a Visayan term
Ilonggo Lauya has langka and cadios.. no tomatoes
Lauya sa ilocano, nilaga sa Tagalog. Almost the same. Pilit lang na iniiba. I am pure ilocano but we don't add tomatoes.
Guys its 2023... 😅😅😅😅