48 Delicious Filipino Recipes You’ll Want to Make on Repeat

Jan ValdezAssociate Recipe Producer
Jan ValdezAssociate Recipe Producer
I cover recipe content on The Kitchn, write and update recipes and recipe roundups, and test recipes for the team. I have 10 years of experience working in R&D test kitchens, testing products and recipes, and at publishers including Serious Eats and EatingWell.
updated Oct 17, 2025
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Savory beef stew with chunks of potatoes, red peppers, in a yellow dutch oven
Credit: Photo: Alex Lepe; Food Styling: Brett Regot

Filipino food is as diverse as the regions that span across the archipelago of over 7,000 islands that make up the Philippines. Adobo, which is regarded as the national dish of the Philippines, is just as diverse, varying from region to region. I grew up eating chicken adobo, pork adobo, and sometimes a combination of both. My mom often added potatoes to her chicken adobo, which would absorb some of the flavorful sabaw. There are versions of chicken adobo with coconut milk, enriching the flavorful sauce. Every family has their version of adobo (and they’ll all say that theirs is the best!).

Here you’ll find classic favorites like lumpia Shanghai, ginataan ga sugpo (prawns with coconut milk), and shrimp and fish sinigang (tamarind stew). For weeknight dinners, recipes like bistek (beef marinated with calamansi, soy, and onions), bola-bola (Filipino meatballs), and picadillo are quick and easy to make for the family. 

Everyone looks forward to desserts and sweets like halo-halo, Filipino fruit salad, and biko (bibingkang malagkit) at celebrations and gatherings. And I love sweet and chewy palitaw as a midday snack — no special occasion needed. 

From hearty breakfasts, to comforting one-pot meals for dinner, to sweet and festive desserts, here are 48 Filipino recipes to make any time of the day.

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Credit: Photo: Alex Lepe; Food Styling: Rachel Perlmutter
Filipino Pancit Bihon

Looking for your next crowd-pleaser? This recipe is the perfect dish to bring to potlucks and dinner parties. It's a classic Filipino stir-fried noodle dish packed with cabbage, carrots, snow peas, and tender chicken.

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Credit: Photo: Christopher Testani; Food Styling: Jesse Szewczyk
Lumpia Shanghai

These crispy Filipino egg rolls are filled with an aromatic pork filling, and served with your choice of dipping sauce. Try them with banana ketchup, sweet chili sauce, or vinegar and soy dipping sauce.

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Credit: Photo: Alex Lepe; Food Styling: James Park
Filipino Chicken Adobo

Kristina Razon's Mom-approved recipe will wow everyone at the table. Bonus: the skin is actually crispy! Because chicken adobo is simmered, you usually lose out on crispiness. Kristina solves this by broiling it quickly.

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Credit: Photo: Jason Rampe; Food Styling: Amelia Rampe
Sinangag (Filipino Garlic Fried Rice)

In Tagalog, sinangag translates to “garlic fried rice," and it's exactly as it sounds: Rice fried with a generous amount of garlic, salt, and pepper. Sinangag is often combined with itlog, meaning “egg,” creating the popular Filipino breakfast silog. There’s no wrong way to “silog” — all you need is garlic fried rice and fried eggs.

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Credit: Photo: Neal Santos; Food Styling Amelia Rampe
Ginataan Na Sugpo (Prawns with Coconut Milk)

Head-on prawns are cooked in an aromatic coconut broth infused with lemongrass, anchovies, ginger, and chiles. It includes two hallmarks of Bicolano cooking: The savory use of coconut milk and spicy heat.

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Credit: Photo: Joe Lingeman; Food Styling: Amelia Rampe
Halo-Halo

The words “halo-halo” translate to “mix-mix” because before you eat the treat, you mix everything up. This Filipino shaved ice dessert is layered with coconut, jackfruit, sweetened bananas, tapioca, nata de coco, and a scoop of coconut or ube ice cream.

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Credit: Photo: Alex Lepe; Food Styling: Brett Regot
Filipino Macaroni Salad

All the contrasting flavors and textures work so well here: the tender pasta, salty ham and cheese, pops of sweetness from the fruit, and the creamy, slightly sweet dressing. Once you try it, you’ll understand why it’s a staple at so many Filipino celebrations.

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Credit: Photo: Alex Lepe; Food Styling: Olushola Wadley
Filipino Chicken Inasal

Grilled chicken thighs in a tangy, sweet, and savory marinade. Serve it with tangy atchara, vinegar and soy dipping sauce, and white rice at your next summer cookout.

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Credit: Photo: Vicky Wasik; Food Styling: Kristina Razon
Filipino Fruit Salad

No Filipino gathering is complete without our version of fruit salad — a creamy, luscious concoction that’s brimming with juicy fruit and drenched in sweetened condensed milk. When Kristina Razon was growing up, her mom brought this refreshing fruit salad to each and every birthday party, graduation, and holiday celebration.

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Credit: Photo: Alex Lepe ; Food Stylist: James Park
Bola-Bola (Filipino Meatballs)

Bola-bola can be served a number of ways. You can pile them onto a platter and serve them with an assortment of dipping sauces, like sweet chili sauce and spiced vinegar. Tuck them into pandesal (Filipino rolls) for lunch or in a rice bowl for dinner.

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Credit: Photo: Alex Lepe; Food Stylist: Spencer Richards
Filipino Spaghetti

Made with hot dogs, ketchup, and ground beef, it’s the ultimate Filipino comfort food. Kristina Razon gives credit to her mom's genius ingredient combination of soy sauce and fish sauce, which makes this version the absolute best.

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Credit: Photo: Joe Lingeman; Food Styling: Micah Morton
Cast Iron Pull-Apart Pandesal

Pandesal (sometimes spelled pan de sal) is the most loved, most popular bread in the Philippines. This recipe is quite similar to Parker House rolls, but with a heartier crust on the bottom (similar to pan de suelo).

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Credit: Photo: Alex Lepe; Food Styling: Janette Zepeda
Filipino Mango Royale

Mango Royale is a popular Filipino icebox cake layered with graham crackers, cream, sweetened condensed milk, and ripe yellow mangoes. It’s sweet, creamy, tart, and has a hint of honey, thanks to the graham crackers.

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Credit: Photo: Alex Lepe; Food Stylist: Spencer Richards
Filipino Beef Short Ribs Adobo

Oven-braised beef short ribs and tender potatoes in a rich and flavorful sauce. Served over rice, it's the ultimate comfort food.

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Credit: Photo: Neal Santos; Food Styling Amelia Rampe
Lumpiang Sariwa (Fresh Lumpia)

We love all types of lumpia, but this version is an all-time favorite. Shredded vegetables, shrimp, and Chinese sausage are wrapped in a crepe and topped with sweet soy sauce and peanuts.

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Credit: Photo: Alex Lepe; Food Stylist: Spencer Richards
Sinigang na Baboy (Filipino Tamarind Soup with Pork and Vegetables)

This weeknight dinner staple, packed with pork spareribs and hearty vegetables, is a favorite in Filipino homes. Some recipes call for fresh tamarind or tamarind paste, but Ria Elciario-McKeown's mom always made sinigang with store-bought tamarind soup mix (which is a popular shortcut). She uses it here too because it saves a lot of time and is equally delicious.

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Credit: Photo: Erik Bernstein; Food Styling: Barrett Washburne
Cassava Cake

You’ll fall in love with the chewy and sticky texture. Instead of using a combination of full-fat coconut milk, evaporated milk, and condensed milk, which is more traditional, Ria Elciario-McKeown's version is creamier, thanks to the addition of coconut cream and butter. She also added vanilla extract to make it extra delicious, and stirred in macapuno strings (coconut sport) to really amp up the nuttiness.

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Credit: Photo: Joe Lingeman; Food Styling: Cyd McDowell
Picadillo

This humble dish of ground beef and vegetables — also called giniling in the Philippines — comes together in a single skillet and is endlessly customizable. In the Philippines, like many dishes, this dish varies from family to family. Amelia Rampe shares the recipe her mom taught her.

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Credit: Photo: Neal Santos; Food Styling: Amelia Rampe
Bistek (Beef Marinated with Calamansi, Soy Sauce, and Onions)

Boneless rib is marinated with citrusy calamansi and soy sauce and served with caramelized onions. As it cooks, the marinade and garlic simmer and thicken slightly, and the citrus, soy, and garlic sing brightly against the beef. It’s perfect with a bowl of rice.

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Credit: Photo: Alex Lepe; Food Stylist: Kelli Foster
Bibingka (Filipino Rice Cake)

Bibingka is a traditional Filipino cake made with rice flour, coconut milk, eggs, and sugar. Banana leaves, which are used to line the cast iron skillet, add an earthy flavor that pairs perfectly with the nutty coconut milk.

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Credit: Photo: Alex Lepe; Food Styling: James Park
Filipino Barbecue Chicken

This tangy, sweet, and salty marinade (made with banana ketchup) makes a delicious, weeknight-friendly chicken dish. Serve with atchara (pickled papaya) and freshly steamed rice.

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Credit: Photo: Neal Santos; Food Styling Amelia Rampe
Peach-Banana Glazed Tocino Skewers with Daikon Atchara

Homemade tocino is skewered, grilled, and served with a banana-peach BBQ glaze and shredded pickled vegetable condiment called atchara. The entire process — from the smells of the grilled skewers to the slight char on the tocino to finishing your bite with a tangy pinch of atchara — elicits all the emotions we hope you’ll always feel when you experience kamayan.

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Credit: Rachel Cook - Half Acre House
Lechon Kawali (Crispy Fried Pork Belly)

There are few more perfect things than Filipino lechon kawali, or pork belly with a wonderfully crispy and browned skin. Sheldon Simeon serves it with a condiment of diced tomatoes, green onions, and white onions tossed with fish sauce and vinegar (he calls it “pinoy de gallo,” aka Filipino salsa), but a simple dipping sauce of chopped chiles and vinegar will also do the trick.

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Credit: Photo: Chris Simpson; Food Styling: Jessie YuChen
Palitaw

Palitaw is a sweet rice cake dish traditionally eaten as “merienda,” or a midday snack in the Philippines. These chewy rice cakes are showered with shredded coconut and filled with just the perfect amount of sweetness.

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Credit: Photo: Joe Lingeman | Food Stylist: Jesse Szewczyk
Dynamite Lumpia

Dinamita, or dynamite lumpia, is a form of lumpia made with green chilies that are stuffed with an aromatic ground pork filling and cheese. The chile is wrapped in a lumpia wrapper, then fried until crispy. It’s reminiscent of a jalapeño popper, but with a light, crispy shell and a deeply savory filling.

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Credit: Photo: Neal Santos; Food Styling: Amelia Rampe
Lugaw (Arroz Caldo)

The ultimate Filipino comfort food. Although some places in the Philippines make lugaw with beef stock, tripe (Goto), or bouillon cubes, Amelia Rampe makes hers with chicken stock and bone-in chicken because the bones give off richer, more intense chicken flavor.

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Credit: Maria Do
Spiced Chicken Adobo

There are as many versions of adobo as there are the many regions and islands in the Philippine archipelago. Yana Gilbuena's version of chicken adobo is made with spiced vinegar, soy sauce, sugar, black peppercorns, and bay leaves.

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Credit: Photo: Alex Lepe; Food Styling: Rachel Perlmutter
Taho (Filipino Silken Tofu with Tapioca and Syrup)

Taho is a Filipino sweet with a delicate custard-like texture that’s made with soybean cakes, arnibal (brown sugar syrup), and sago (pea-size white transparent chewy balls made from palm flour).Serve it for breakfast with warm pandesal, as an after-school snack, or even as a dessert after dinner.

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Credit: Photo: Neal Santos; Food Styling: Amelia Rampe
Shrimp and Fish Sinigang (Tamarind Stew)

A tamarind-based stew with shrimp, fish, and vegetables. This one ingredient makes it easy to have sinigang on a weeknight.

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Credit: Photo: Joe Lingeman; Food Styling: Amelia Rampe
Kinilaw (Filipino Ceviche)

An indigenous Filipino preparation of fish and seafood that involves "cooking" it in a mixture of calamansi and coconut vinegar and aromatics.

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Credit: Photo: Neal Santos; Food Styling Amelia Rampe
Ukoy with Shrimp and Anchovies

Every bite of these crispy fried shrimp and vegetable fritters features an eye-widening harmony of salty, tangy, crunchy flavors and textures. You can experiment with different types of vegetables, but Jen Phanomrat finds that root vegetables hold up best and stay crispier longer. She likes the combination of ube (purple yam), orange sweet potato, and carrots, along with red onion and scallion.

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Credit: Photo: Andrew Bui; Food Styling: Rebecca Jurkevich
Buko Pandan

Buko pandan is a refreshing fruit salad composed mainly of young coconut chunks, pandan-flavored jelly, and sweetened table cream. It's a true textural delight.

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Credit: Photo: Neal Santos; Food Styling: Amelia Rampe
Chicken Adobo with Coconut Milk (Adobo sa Gatâ)

One of Amelia Rampe's favorite ways to have adobo that she didn’t grow up eating is adobo infused with coconut milk. There are coconuts all over the Philippines, and in this recipe coconut milk adds a luxurious texture to the broth.

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Credit: Photo: Neal Santos; Food Styling: Amelia Rampe
Gising-Gising (Pork Simmered in Coconut Milk and Shrimp Paste)

Gising-gising, which literally translates to “wake-up wake-up,” is packed with spice from chiles and deeply savory bagoong. It’s part of a family of dishes called ginataan, which translates to “food cooked in coconut milk.”

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Credit: Photo: Joe Lingeman; Food Styling: Anna Stockwell
Lechon Po' Boy

This Filipino-Cajun po' boy consists of aromatic fork-tender lechon pork served on French rolls with lettuce, cucumber, and tomato salad. It’s easy to combine Filipino and Cajun flavors, considering the extensive history of Filipinos in Louisiana – Louisiana is the original settlement of Filipinos in America.

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Credit: Jason Rampe
Biko (Bibingkang Malagkit)

This Filipino sticky rice cake, which requires just four ingredients, is topped with a layer of homemade coconut caramel. The coconut caramel heavily relies on good-quality coconut milk, so use the richest one you can find.

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Credit: Photo: Erik Bernstein; Food Stylist: Ben Weiner
Kare-Kare

Kare-Kare is the classic Filipino peanut stew filled with slices of oxtail, beef tripe, and an abundance of vegetables like long green beans, eggplants, Chinese cabbage, and banana heart simmered in a rich, thick, nutty sauce. Making kare-kare is a labor of love, so whenever Elizabeth Ann Quirino's mother cooked it, she knew it was a special occasion.

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Credit: Photo: Neal Santos; Food Styling Amelia Rampe
Ginataan Pancit Canton Noodles with Miso and Pink Peppercorns

This velvety bowl of slippery, creamy noodles — made with coconut milk, miso, and plenty of aromatics — satisfies my cravings for both cacio e pepe and pancit.

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Credit: Photo: Alex Lepe; Food Styling: Nicole Rufus
Ube Swirl Ice Cream

A no-churn ice cream base rippled with fudgy, vibrant purple swirls made from white chocolate and fragrant ube extract. Kristina Razon loves to show off scoops of this eye-catching ice cream in glass bowls and shower it with toasted shredded coconut (a popular ube pairing) to serve to family and friends.

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Credit: Photo: Neal Santos; Food Styling Amelia Rampe
Ricotta Bibingka

Bibingka — traditionally a cake made from glutinous rice flour, sugar, and coconut milk — is often known as a Christmas dish, but there’s no reason it shouldn’t be an everyday dish. These bite-sized ricotta bibingka are extra rich, thanks to evaporated milk, whole-milk ricotta cheese, cream cheese, and coconut milk.

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Credit: Joe Lingeman
Instant Pot Chicken Adobo

The Instant Pot can get this chicken adobo dinner to the table in well under an hour.

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Credit: Photo: Ghazalle Badiozamani; Food Styling: Jesse Szewczyk
Ube Crinkle Cookies

Ube, pronounced ooh-beh, has a natural, deep purple color and a flavor that's a mix between vanilla and pistachio. Here, it replaces chocolate in the classic crinkle cookie.

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Credit: Amelia Rampe
Filipino Sourdough Pandesal

Pandesal (or pan de sal), translates to “salt bread,” but it leans more sweet than salty with a soft texture and a golden, gently-crisped top.

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Credit: Apartment Therapy
Royal Bibingka

Royal bibingka is a sweet, chewy Filipino dessert made with glutinous sweet rice flour and coconut. It has a rich, buttery, coconut flavor with the addictive textural combination of a crackly crust and eggy, chewy center.

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Credit: Jan Valdez
Calamansi Coconut Bars

Arlyn Osborne, food writer and the author of the cookbook, Sugarcane: Sweet Recipes from My Half-Filipino Kitchen, uses calamansi juice in her recipe for Calamansi Coconut Bars. They’re sweet, just a bit tart, buttery, and chewy all in one bite.

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