tinapa
{{Short description|Filipino smoked fish}}
{{For|the Nigerian resort|Tinapa Resort}}
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{{Use Philippine English|date=November 2022}}
Tinapa, a Filipino term, is fish cooked or preserved through the process of smoking. It is a native delicacy in the Philippines and is often made from blackfin scad (Alepes melanoptera, known locally as galunggong), or from milkfish, which is locally known as bangus.
Though canned tinapa in tomato sauce is common and sold commercially throughout the country, it is also still produced and sold traditionally or prepared at home. Tinapa recipe mainly involves the process of washing the fish and putting it in brine for an extended amount of time (usually 5 – 6 hours), air drying and finally smoking the fish. The fish species which are commonly used for making tinapa could either be galunggong (scads) or bangus (milkfish).[http://pinoycook.net/tinapa-smoked-fish-2/ "Tinapa (smoked fish)."] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100615210737/http://pinoycook.net/tinapa-smoked-fish-2/ |date=June 15, 2010 }} [http://pinoycook.net Pinoycook.net]. Accessed July 2011.
[https://recipenijuan.com/tinapa-recipe/ "Tinapa Recipe Preparation and Method"]
The term tinapa means "prepared by smoking". The root word tapa in Philippine languages originally meant fish or meat preserved by smoking. In the Spanish Philippines, it came to refer to meats (modern tapa) preserved by other means. It is derived from Proto-Malayo-Polynesian *tapa, which in turn is derived from Proto-Austronesian *Capa.{{cite web |author=Robert Blust & Stephen Trussel|title=Austronesian Comparative Dictionary: *Capa |url=http://www.trussel2.com/acd/acd-s_c2.htm#25876 |website=Austronesian Comparative Dictionary |access-date=July 5, 2018}}{{cite book |last=English |first=Leo |title=English — Tagalog Dictionary |publisher=Congregation of The Most Holy Redeemer |date=1989 |orig-year=1st. Pub. 1977 |pages=[https://archive.org/details/englishtagalogdi00leoj/page/966 966] |isbn=971-08-2962-9 |url=https://archive.org/details/englishtagalogdi00leoj/page/966 }}
See also
References
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{{Filipino food}}
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