ʸ п 迬 Ŀ´Ƽ
ʸ п ۽ƮŬ ڴ 18 Ͽ츦 Ȯ 帳ϴ.
  • ȸ
  • Malacañang Palace-Official Residence of the Pres
     
     138,882
  • Amana Water Park
     
     115,402
  • IFUGAO TRIBE
     
     109,385
  • Santacruzan-The Queen of all Filipino Festivals
     
     109,271
  • Water Refilling Station: an alternative source of drink
     
     107,162
  • LAMBANOG-THE POOR MAN\'S DRINK
     
     104,515
  • Christmas Parol [lantern in English]
     
     104,359
  • HANGING RICE
     
     97,035
  • Taoist Temple
     
     93,994
  • Corn Fields in the Philippines
     
     90,468
HANGING RICE
  • ̸ : tutors
  • ۼ : 2011-04-18
  • ȸ : 97036
  • õ : 0

 

 

 

 

 

                                                               HANGING RICE

 

"Hanging rice" is the English term Cebuanos apply to something called puso, which is, essentially, boiled rice.

 

Essentially, puso is rice wrapped in woven strands of palm frond. A large bundle of small packets is tied together, and that's why puso are referred to as hanging rice in English. The advantages of puso over rice cooked in the traditional way are manifold. Puso evolved centuries ago, and to this day the woven palm leaves remain a viable form of packaging. The rice is kept free of dust and insects, and the packaging material is completely natural and biodegradable. The fact that the rice is packaged is the crucial driving element which provides the raison d'etre for puso. If you think about it, puso are all about efficiency and productivity.

 

 

Think of it at outsourcing. Since the rice is packaged, it can be delivered. This means that, instead of having to cook the rice yourself, you can concentrate on barbecuing and serving your customers, while someone else delivers the rice. It may seem inefficient to wrap rice in leaves and then boil it, but the reverse is true thanks to the extra margin of productivity generated by the division of labor and the benefits of mass production. Incredibly, this concept of outsourcing rice production was invented long before the term "outsourcing" - before the Spaniards arrived in this part of the world, in fact.

 

 

Usually, one puso retails for between 2 and 3 pesos. If the cost of rice, energy, labor, and transportation is taken into account, this is incredibly cheap. Puso are proof that traditional craftsmanship - we're talking about the weaving of palm leaves here - can stay competitive in contemporary times. I've tried calculating an estimate, and it's clear that puso producers rely on razor-thin margins. The market is large, and competition between manufacturers is intense.

 

Puso are eaten almost exclusively with barbecue. I've never seen or heard of anyone eating puso with, for instance, beef stew. In fact, barbecue restaurants are the only places you can get puso. Expensive restaurants do not serve puso, and you can't buy puso in shops. Now, barbecue is eaten with the hands, and the fact that the rice in puso has been compacted in to a fairly hard mass makes it easy to eat with your fingers. That's another advantage.

 
ۼ йȣ
 
ڴ κ ʸ :  498
ȣ
ۼ
¥
ȸ
358 
tutors
2013-06-14
3738
357 
tutors
2013-06-14
4069
356 
2013-06-04
4184
355 
2013-06-04
4868
354 
2013-06-03
4540
353 
tutors
2013-05-31
38166
352 
tutors
2013-05-31
4847
351 
tutors
2013-05-31
8761
350 
tutors
2013-05-31
12216
349 
tutors
2013-05-31
5520
347 
tutors
2013-05-15
75720
344 
tutors
2013-04-23
61983
343 
tutors
2013-04-19
7426
342 
tutors
2013-04-10
4882
340 
tutors
2013-03-25
115402
339 
tutors
2013-03-18
5950
ʸ
 
湮㿹 Խ û ӽû

 
 



 
Ʈ ۱ ֽȸ ڴĿ , ̸ ̿ϴ ۱ǹ  å ֽϴ.
ڹȣ:101-86-75905 ڸ:ֽȸ ǥ:ڼö
ڵϹȣ:2015-000011ȣ ּ:Ư 27 8, 10(ﵿ Ÿ)
ȸ Ұ | ä | ޹ | ̿ | ޹ħ | Żϱ
comodo_logo
ڴ ȸ Ʈ ̿ Ϻϰ ȣϱ SSL(Secure Socket Layer) ȣȭ ü迡 ȣ˴ϴ.
Copyright 2006 philja.com. All rights reserved.
 
弾 ij ̱ ȣ۽Ʈ