Filipino Tamales

Filipino Tamales with Baybayin

Tamales are most known from Mexico where they vary by region. Most people know them as steamed corn-husk-wrapped masa or corn dough filled with flavored meats, chilis, vegetables and/or cheese. Tamales by Mayan and Aztec communities have been made with various fillings, wrappings, and cooking methods since 250 CE

During Spanish colonization of the Philippines, tamales were brought to the country and became “Filipinized”. Filipinos began making them with readily available ingredients like banana leaves, rice, chicken, pork, and more!

Bulacan Tamales

Tamalis ng Bulacan with Baybayin

Bulacan Tamalis (often spelled with an “i” instead of “e”) are almost bite-sized sweet and savory tamales made in Bulacan. They are filled with rice dough, a savory slice of salted egg, and topped with latik or toasted coconut crumbs. The rice dough is particularly unique, because Bulaceño chefs cook down the rice dough until it reaches a fine consistency… smooth to the tongue! Once cooked they are wrapped in fresh, bright, banana leaves, and shaped into small pyramids.

Rachelle’s Sherbert and Ice Cream from Bulacan is mostly known for its desserts, but they also sell Bulacan tamalis! As noted by the shop’s tamalis tagline: “Giniling na bigas na may itlog na maalat at latik sa ibabaw,” or made with rice flour with salted egg and topped with sweet coconut crumbs.

Batangas Tamales

Tamales ng Batangas with Baybayin

Batangas Tamales are hearty and filling meals-on-the-go, the perfect baon or merienda on a busy day. In fact tamales in Mexico were a protein-rich portable meal used by Mexican revolutionaries and Aztec warriors for hunting trips or to fuel armies. They are almost twice as large as Bulacan tamales, and shaped into small banana leaf wrapped boxes.

Ka Bella’s Tamales of Lipa, based in Batangas, makes tamales filled with chicken, pork, and peanuts. Their recipe dates back to the 1800’s and was passed down through their grandmothers or lolas since.

Zamboanga Tamales

Tamal de Zamboanga with Baybayin

Tamal de Zamboanga is a rice-dough-based tamal wrapped in banana leaves! It is filled with boiled egg and peppery pancit bihon or sotanghon.

Pampanga Tamales or Bobotu

Bobotu or Kapampangan Tamales with Baybayin

Locally known as Bobotu, Kapampangan tamales are filled with the following in Kapampangan: giniling a abias (rice flour), gata (coconut milk), sabo na ning atsuete (annato powder), simulmul ning ligang manuc (shredded chicken), penguiling ham (sliced ham), and ligang ebun (boiled egg). Once opened they look like little mosaics of red, white, and yellow… pieces of art wrapped in banana leaves. The script used here is actually the Kapampangan script Kulitan or Súlat Kapampángan.

Filipino Tamales art

Filipino tamales artprint with Baybayin

Printable Filipino Tamales art:

Totebags on Redbubble:

Artprints on Filipino Food Art Society6: