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Cooked From the Heart » Filipino, side dishes, vegetables » Sayote with Bagoong

Sayote with Bagoong

All these reminiscing about life in Baguio here and here just got me thinking about these: Sayote or as it is called in the grocery stores here, Chayote Squash. These are pretty mild as squashes go, and while they can be used in various soups and saute’s, sometimes they are best enjoyed simply boiled and dipped in bagoong (fermented fish paste) and vinegar. The green stuff floating in the dipping sauce is green habanero sauce, that’s optional. I just like spicy stuff. I had these with the clams, as I just have to have some kind of vegetable with all my meals and these were simple enough to make, just boil till tender. My hubby even tasted these, dipped in the bagoong, and he liked it! Mikey liked it! :)

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I am a terrible housekeeper but I do love to cook so it all evens out in the end. I like to try new recipes that I think my family will like. However, I am not one to follow all recipes to the letter. I tend to tweak and change the recipes based on what I have on hand and how I am feeling at the time. Feel free to share your versions, I just might try it out next time I make the dish again.

Filed under: Filipino, side dishes, vegetables

8 Responses to "Sayote with Bagoong"

  1. mardine says:

    it’s a good recipe!

  2. Anonymous says:

    Hi…I live in Hawaii and my husband bought bunches of Sayote greens! What can we do with them? Any recipie ideas?

    Thanks

  3. purplegirl says:

    never had boiled sayote. with bagoong — now that’s a wonderful combination!

  4. JMom says:

    Hi Jonny! You should try it, it is as good as it looks, it has a very clean, refreshing taste.

    Ting, I did try doing that one time, but it just either shrivelled up or rotted. I think they are older than we are used to in Baguio, or not mature enough yet. These hardly have any seeds either, so maybe they are not mature enough to sprout.

  5. ting-aling says:

    JMom, if the sayote is left for a long time even just in your vegetable crisper (in Baguio anyways), the sayote would “sprout” with leaves? ‘ever tried doing that?

  6. Evil Jonny says:

    Hmmm, I’ll have to try it! Looks good!

  7. JMom says:

    Ako rin, manang, I haven’t seen seeds or seedlings for sayote yet. Luckily, they started carrying them at the local grocery stores here. Pero, hindi parin kasing sarap ng galing sa atin, mas fresh kasi sa atin eh, you just go in the backyard and pick some. And these must have been hybridized varieties because they have no thorns, they are smooth as pears. Some people actually mistake them for pears.

  8. Manang says:

    I sooo miss sayote! We don’t have it here…And I don’t see it on gardening catalogs…I would have been willing to tray to raise it and enjoy it at least every summer…

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