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Portuguese vs Philippines food & cuisine

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Portugal

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Philippines

In Portugal, people consume about 2419 g of food per day, with produce taking the biggest share at 39%, and fish and seafood coming in last at 7%. In Philippines, the daily total is around 1593 g, with grains leading at 46% and eggs and dairy at the bottom with 5%.

Portugal

Philippines

The average Portuguese daily plate size is

The average Philippines daily plate size is

2419 g.
1593 g.
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Grains

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Fish and seafood

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Produce

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Eggs and dairy

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Meats

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Sugar, fats and nuts

Even with such external influences, the Portuguese remained mostly faithful to their local foodways. The essence of Portuguese cuisine lies in its simplicity and respect for hearty, rustic dishes born from land and sea: an extraordinary variety of seafood, dedication to slowly-simmered flavors, and rich, hearty stews – all unpretentious food that prioritizes quality ingredients over complexity.

When in Portugal, expect a big portion, where at the center is bread and wine followed by soup and the main course of stews, grilled meats, or seafood, served with rice and potatoes on one plate.

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Grains 383 G

WHEAT

265 G

RICE

47 G

CORN

48 G

BARLEY

8 G

RYE

8 G

OATS

6 G

MILLET

0 G

SORGHUM

0 G

OTHER CEREALS

1 G

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Grains 735 G

WHEAT

112 G

RICE

523 G

CORN

98 G

BARLEY

1 G

RYE

0 G

OATS

1 G

MILLET

0 G

SORGHUM

0 G

OTHER CEREALS

0 G

Unlike their Mediterranean neighbors, the Portuguese consume fewer wheat-based cereals, instead favoring corn and rice. This dietary distinction is further shaped by Portugal’s strong emphasis on fish, seafood, and meat, which naturally reduces the cereal grains in daily eating. Despite this overall pattern, bread remains a critical staple—Portuguese so appreciate their bread that it accompanies every meal of the day.

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Produce 931 G

PULSES

10 G

VEGETABLES

345 G

STARCHY ROOTS

175 G

FRUITS

401 G

SEA PLANTS

0 G

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Produce 487 G

PULSES

4 G

VEGETABLES

162 G

STARCHY ROOTS

54 G

FRUITS

264 G

SEA PLANTS

0 G

Portugal has a never-ending affair with potatoes, as potatoes are featured in almost every dish. It is likely to find both rice and potatoes as side dishes on the same plate. Portuguese justify it that a high carb combination provides you with the energy to explore countries.

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Meats 270 G

POULTRY

85 G

PORK

108 G

BEEF

57 G

MUTTON AND GOAT

6 G

OTHER MEAT

2 G

OFFALS

12 G

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Meats 108 G

POULTRY

44 G

PORK

40 G

BEEF

9 G

MUTTON AND GOAT

1 G

OTHER MEAT

0 G

OFFALS

14 G

Portuguese meat consumption is relatively high within the Mediterranean. When combining meat and fish consumption, Portugal ranks among the world’s top five consumers. The average Portuguese person consumes approximately 430 grams of animal protein daily – translating to an impressive 157 kilograms per person annually.

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Fish and seafood 164 G

FISH

120 G

SEAFOOD

44 G

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Fish and seafood 78 G

FISH

70 G

SEAFOOD

8 G

Portugal is a seafaring nation with a well-developed fishing industry, and it reflects well on Portuguese tables.
The average Portuguese consumes 60 kilos of fish and seafood yearly—3.5 times more than the typical world citizen!

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Eggs and dairy 492 G

EGGS

29 G

MILK AND DAIRY

435 G

ANIMAL FATS

28 G

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Eggs and dairy 74 G

EGGS

14 G

MILK AND DAIRY

51 G

ANIMAL FATS

9 G

Like in many Western cultures, milk and dairy are commonly used plain, fermented to yogurt, or as an ingredient in dishes: sauces, pastries, desserts, custards, and puddings use milk or cream as a primary ingredient. Portugal has rich cheese-making traditions, made from cows, goat, or sheep’s milk. Usually, these are very strongly flavored and fragrant.

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SUGARS, FATS AND NUTS 179 G

NUTS

22 G

SWEETENERS

84 G

SUGAR CROPS

0 G

VEG OILS

54 G

OILCROPS

19 G

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SUGARS, FATS AND NUTS 111 G

NUTS

6 G

SWEETENERS

67 G

SUGAR CROPS

0 G

VEG OILS

15 G

OILCROPS

23 G

Overall, Mediterranean countries are famous for loving and producing nuts, and though Portugal is slightly below the regional average, they still consume around 8 kilos of nuts per person per year.

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Herbs

CILANTRO

LEMON VERBENA

MARJORAM

OREGANO

PARSLEY

ROSEMARY

THYME

BAY LEAVES

LEMONGRASS

Portugal
Common
Philippines

CILANTRO

LEMON VERBENA

MARJORAM

OREGANO

PARSLEY

ROSEMARY

THYME

BAY LEAVES

LEMONGRASS

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Spices

CINNAMON

CLOVES

CORIANDER

CUMIN

NUTMEG

PAPRIKA

SAFFRON

SMOKED PAPRIKA

BLACK PEPPER

DRY CHILI

ANNATTO/ACHIOTE

TURMERIC DRY

Portugal
Common
Philippines

CINNAMON

CLOVES

CORIANDER

CUMIN

NUTMEG

PAPRIKA

SAFFRON

SMOKED PAPRIKA

BLACK PEPPER

DRY CHILI

ANNATTO/ACHIOTE

TURMERIC DRY

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Aromatics

BELL PEPPERS

CARROT

LEMON

ORANGE

CHILI PEPPERS

GARLIC

ONION

TOMATO

CALAMANSI

GINGER

PANDANUS LEAVES

SHALLOT

TURMERIC

Portugal
Common
Philippines

BELL PEPPERS

CARROT

LEMON

ORANGE

CHILI PEPPERS

GARLIC

ONION

TOMATO

CALAMANSI

GINGER

PANDANUS LEAVES

SHALLOT

TURMERIC

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Condiments

CAPERS

OLIVE OIL

OLIVES

WINE

WINE VINEGAR

PORK FAT

CANE VINEGAR

COCONUT MILK

COCONUT VINEGAR

FERMENTED FISH/SEAFOOD

FISH SAUCE

PALM VINEGAR

SOY SAUCE

TAMARIND

Portugal
Common
Philippines

CAPERS

OLIVE OIL

OLIVES

WINE

WINE VINEGAR

PORK FAT

CANE VINEGAR

COCONUT MILK

COCONUT VINEGAR

FERMENTED FISH/SEAFOOD

FISH SAUCE

PALM VINEGAR

SOY SAUCE

TAMARIND

Portugal

SEASONINGS

Portuguese seasoning traditions share many herbs with their Mediterranean neighbors. Portugal stands out in Southern Europe for its extensive use of cilantro, using it in countless traditional dishes. Parsley also dominates the herbal profile, cinnamon, vanilla, and nutmeg enhance pastries, while pepper, bay leaves, cumin, and paprika add distinctiveness to savory dishes. Onions, garlic, and tomatoes form the aromatic base, complemented by olive oil, butter, and grape-based wine vinegar.

SAUCES

While Portuguese cuisine is not known for being spice-hot, it has a unique fiery signature sauce unmatched in southern Mediterranean cooking: PIRI-PIRI (or PERI-PERI). The key ingredient, the spicy chillied travelled a long way to settle in southern Portuguese cuisine. The original chilli comes from the Americas, but it was not immediately adopted by the Portuguese. They carried chilli plants to their African colonies, mainly Mozambique and Angola, where the plants thrived and the African bird’s-eye variety developed. Portuguese settlers and local African cooks began mixing these chillies with garlic, lemon, oil and salt. The sauce later made its way back to Portugal and became part of Portuguese cuisine. The sauce is paired with flame-grilled chicken (frango piri-piri), seafood, rice, and vegetable dishes.

MOLHO VERDE – A green sauce with olive oil, garlic, parsley, and vinegar or lemon juice, commonly served with grilled fish.

VINHA D’ALHOS – A marinade-like sauce of wine vinegar, garlic, bay leaves, and paprika used for pork and other meats.

ALHADA – A garlic-olive oil emulsion sometimes enhanced with cilantro, used particularly with shellfish dishes like amêijoas à Bulhão Pato.

MOLHO DE VILÃO – a traditional sauce from the Azores, made of garlic, onions, olive oil, paprika, vinegar, and sometimes white wine. A tangy sauce paired with grilled meats, particularly pork, gives a rich, smoky flavor.

REFOGADO – Not strictly a sauce but a flavor base of sautéed onions, garlic, bay leaf, olive oil, and sometimes tomatoes that starts many Portuguese dishes.

Philippines

SEASONINGS

Filipino flavors are built in layers, then finished at the table. First, the cook builds the base in the pot, but the diner also cooperates and participates while choosing and adding sawsawans (dippings) entirely to his liking, and that transforms the whole taste and experience.

Filipino cooking is organized among the three dominant axes of sour, salty-umami, and sweet. The very core flavors are salty and sour, as sweetness appears, but rarely dominates. Heat is optional and very personal (except for Bicol region and Mindanao, where spice pastes and chilies are prominent). Filipino cooking also conspicuously skips fresh herbs as a finishing element, which Thai, Vietnamese, and Indonesian cuisines rely on heavily.

Salt is fundamentally important to preserve from spoilage, it comes through patis fish sauce, bagoong isda fermented fish paste, bagoong alamang fermented shrimp paste, and soy sauce. Salt as a bare mineral is the condiment of last resort.  Umami comes from those same fermented ingredients, from long-cooked meat broths, from dried and smoked fish added to stews, and from annatto-colored fat used to start dishes.

Then the saltiness is paired with sourness, which also helps preserve. The Philippines uses vinegar on a fundamentally different scale and in a structurally different way than its neighbors do. Neighboring cuisines use chili to wake up the senses, but Filipinos use vinegar, and this is the core distinction. Vinegars come from palm sap, coconuts, sugarcane, and sugarcane wine. Sourness extensively comes from fruits – tamarind (sour fruit pod), calamansi (tangy citrus), kamias (cucumber tree, acidic green fruit), guava, green mango, batuan (small green sour fruit).

Anato (achiotte) is a coloring spice. It consists of annatto seeds fried in oil, which turn dishes a bright orange-red color. Simmering ingredients in coconut milk — a technique called ginataan — appears often. Coconut milk gata absorbs and carries fat-soluble flavors, softens acidity, and adds richness.  Ginger deodorizes fish and meat, warms broths; bay leaves, a direct inheritance from Spanish cooking, feature braises — adobo, mechado, kaldereta. At the table, achara — green papaya pickled in vinegar and spices — sits apart from the sawsawan lineup to cleanse the palate.

Filipinos flavor building starts with gisa. The gisa is the base for adobo, kare-kare, mechado, afritada, monggo, pancit, many soups. From its contents, it has a lot of ties with Spanish sofrito.  Garlic goes first, browning until golden and fragrant. Onion follows, softening in the garlic-infused oil. Tomato goes last, its liquid is released to form the base liquid of the dish.

One of the most personal parts of a Filipino meal is  sawsawan, a fundamental Filipino dipping sauce, and ultimate flavor customization tool. Some common elements in the sawsawan lineup include:

Suka (vinegar) — usually cane or coconut, sometimes spiced with garlic and labuyo. Used with virtually everything fried or fatty. The vinegar cuts grease and provides the sour axis.

Toyo (soy sauce) — thinner and saltier than Japanese soy sauce, provides the salty-umami axis. Often combined with calamansi to make toyomansi, the most common everyday condiment.

Patis (fish sauce) — patis has many uses in the Filipino kitchen: as a dipping sauce, as a source of salt, and as a flavoring agent. Many Filipino cooks use it instead of salt. In sinigang, for example, there is no salt in the ingredients list; the dish is finished with patis, which adds salinity as well as its own distinctive flavor.

Calamansi — provides the bright, floral citrus note that lime and lemon cannot replicate. It is squeezed directly over anything that needs brightness.

Bagoong — Fermented fish or shrimp paste for deep, complex umami. It has specific pairings, most notably kare-kare and green mango.

Most sawsawan are assembled raw at the table. Lechon sauce is the major exception, and it is a genuinely unusual preparation as it includes water, sugar, breadcrumbs, vinegar, salt, liver, spices, and pepper. Ground roasted liver is the most important ingredient.

BANANA KETCHUP— condiment made from banana, sugar, vinegar, and spices. Its natural color is brownish-yellow, but it is often dyed red to resemble tomato ketchup. Uniquely Filipino, paired with fried chicken, hot dogs, and fast food

PALAPA —  a traditional condiment from the Maranao people of Mindanao, consisting of a spicy and aromatic blend from chopped scallion bulbs, ginger, turmeric, chilies, and often toasted coconut.

Who EATs more per day?

Pick the heavier plate

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