HANGING RICE IN CEBU
"Hanging rice" is the English term Cebuanos apply to something called puso, which is, essentially,
boiled rice. But leaving it at that is like dismissing fettuccine as noodles. Puso is rice, yes, but it is
more than that; puso is an integral part of the barbecue culture of Cebu, and I would go so far
as to call it an art. Puso is to the Cebuano what the baguette is to the Parisian, or the bagel is
to the New Yorker. This page is my wholy inadequate tribute to puso.
It should be noted that while people barbecue all over the Philippines, barbecuing has evolved into a
major culture only here in Cebu. No suprise, then, that puso are unique to Cebu. For the citizens of
Manila, puso are just as exotic as they are to you. Well, almost.
An additional factor is that rice served in the form of puso has, by definition, been divided
into standard units. This allows quick and easy accounting between suppliers and restorateurs,
as well as between restorateurs and customers. Each puso delivered by the same supplier is
exactly the same size
Perhaps you are by now itching to try puso out. If you want large, expensive, and fresh
puso, go to Tsibogs, where the puso is often still warm. Note that you should
specify "puso", since upscale barbecue restaurants serve both puso as well as rice
boiled in the traditional way. Puso are universally of good quality, though some of the
cheaper eateries may serve stale puso (as well as stale barbecue). You can tell
that a packet of puso is old if the rice is starting to turn a brownish hue around the edges.
Note that puso is just rice; it is not salted or flavored in any way.
However, the rice does pick up some fragrance and pigmentation from the palm leaves.
Eventually one becomes used to this.
STEPS IN MAKING HANGING RICE
PREPARING THE STRIPS
THE BASIC SHAPE IS FORMED . . .
. . . AND WOVEN WITH INCREDIBLE SPEED. . .
. . . UNTIL RICE IS INSERTED
A BEAUTIFUL GREEN PRIOR TO COOKING
THE PUSO STAY IN THESE DRUMS FOR 30 MINUTES
LOOKS ALMOST READY
DONE