pork

Products

Dek Som Boon Thick Oyster Sauce 1LDek Som Boon Thick Oyster Sauce 1L

Dek Som Boon Thick Oyster Sauce 1L

Rating value is 5 of 5
Not in stock (0 pc)
6,31 €
(0,63 €/100 ml) 5,74 € excl. VAT
Rich, thick oyster sauce with a glossy finish—ideal for stir-fries, marinades, noodles, and dipping sauces when you want deep umami fast.
Squid Fish Sauce 4,5L

Squid Fish Sauce 4,5L

Not in stock (0 pc)
19,82 €
(0,44 €/100 ml) 18,02 € excl. VAT
Classic Thai fish sauce with deep umami and a clean salty punch—use sparingly in stir-fries, soups, marinades, and dipping sauces.
Lee Kum Kee Hoisin sauce 397 gLee Kum Kee Hoisin sauce 397 g

Lee Kum Kee Hoisin sauce 397 g

Rating value is 5 of 5
Not in stock (0 pc)
4,37 €
(1,10 €/100 g) 3,97 € excl. VAT
Thick, savoury-sweet hoisin sauce for glazing grilled meats, stirring into noodles and stir-fries, or serving as a dip for dumplings and…
Hikari Savoury Miso Paste White 300 g

Hikari Savoury Miso Paste White 300 g

Not in stock (0 pc)
4,09 €
(1,36 €/100 g) 3,72 € excl. VAT
Mild, slightly sweet white miso with rounded umami—ideal for miso soup, dressings, marinades, and light sauces without overpowering other…
Sempio Soybean paste Ssamjang 250 g

Sempio Soybean paste Ssamjang 250 g

Not in stock (0 pc)
2,68 €
(1,07 €/100 g) 2,44 € excl. VAT
Thick, savoury ssamjang with chilli and garlic—ideal for lettuce wraps, BBQ dipping, or stirring into soups and stews for quick umami depth.

Articles

Seasoning Roast Pork Neck (Pork Collar)

Seasoning Roast Pork Neck (Pork Collar)

Roast pork neck—also called pork collar—is naturally forgiving thanks to its marbling, but the difference between “nice” and “unforgettable” comes down to seasoning and timing. This guide shows you how to build flavor with a dry rub, a marinade, or a final glaze, plus a few easy Asian-leaning twists that still feel right for an oven roast.


Homemade Filipino Tocino (Sweet-Cured Pork) Recipe

Homemade Filipino Tocino (Sweet-Cured Pork) Recipe

Tocino is a Filipino classic: thin slices of pork cured in a sweet-salty marinade, then pan-cooked until glossy and lightly caramelized. This homemade version is easy to prep ahead and perfect for a comfort-food breakfast with rice and a fried egg.


Kimchi Soup (Kimchi Jjigae) with Pork and Tofu

Kimchi Soup (Kimchi Jjigae) with Pork and Tofu

Kimchi soup is the kind of Korean comfort food that tastes bigger than its ingredient list: tangy, spicy, and deeply savory. This version uses pork and tofu for a hearty bowl you can cook on a weeknight—especially if you have well-fermented kimchi in the fridge.



Oven-Roasted Pork Neck: Juicy Inside, Crisp Crust, Effortless Method

Oven-Roasted Pork Neck: Juicy Inside, Crisp Crust, Effortless Method

Pork neck (also sold as pork collar) is naturally marbled, which makes it one of the most forgiving cuts for oven roasting. This recipe keeps the prep simple, delivers a juicy sliceable roast, and finishes with a fragrant, lightly crisp crust—plus an optional sweet-salty glaze if you want a subtle Asian-inspired twist.


Bún Bò Huế (Vietnamese Spicy Beef & Pork Noodle Soup) — Recipe

Bún Bò Huế (Vietnamese Spicy Beef & Pork Noodle Soup) — Recipe

Bún bò Huế is Vietnam’s bold, lemongrass-forward noodle soup from the former imperial city of Huế. This recipe walks you through a fragrant beef-and-pork broth, a quick chili oil for that signature red hue, and the fresh herb toppings that make each bowl taste bright, spicy, and deeply savoury.




Seasoning for Pork Roast: How to Get Juicy Meat and a Bold, Crackly Crust

Seasoning for Pork Roast: How to Get Juicy Meat and a Bold, Crackly Crust

Pork roast can feel like a special occasion dish or an easy weeknight dinner—often the only difference is how you season it. Learn what “pork roast seasoning” really means, how to apply it for maximum aroma and crust, and how to add a subtle Asian-inspired edge (think warm spices and savory depth) without losing that classic roasted-pork character.


Recipe for Tonkatsu with Sauce

Recipe for Tonkatsu with Sauce

Discover the magic of Japanese cuisine with this recipe for a crispy dish that will amaze you with its simplicity and great taste. When tender pork chops meet a delicious sauce, the result is a dish that is perfect for any occasion. Be inspired by this recipe and experience a unique combination of flavors right in your own kitchen!


Bún Riêu (Vietnamese Crab & Tomato Noodle Soup) Recipe

Bún Riêu (Vietnamese Crab & Tomato Noodle Soup) Recipe

Bún Riêu is a bright, savory Vietnamese noodle soup built on tomatoes, seafood umami, and a generous pile of fresh herbs. This home-friendly version keeps the signature sweet-sour balance and “riêu” crab clusters—without requiring hard-to-find ingredients.



Brown rice chili paste

Brown rice chili paste

Discover the unique flavor of brown rice chili paste! This article will guide you through the world of exotic flavors and show you how this spicy ingredient can spice up your favorite recipes. Read on to find out how it's made, where to use it, and why you should try it!


Recipe for Okonomiyaki with Sauce

Recipe for Okonomiyaki with Sauce

Discover the taste of Japan with Okonomiyaki – an easy and delicious savory pancake that you can customize to your liking. Quick, delicious, and perfect for any occasion!


Sweet and sour sauce

Sweet and sour sauce

Discover the secrets of sweet and sour sauces. Learn how to make them and use them in various dishes, from fried foods to noodles and dips. This article will show you how to add new dimensions to your favorite meals.


Kimchi

Kimchi

Want to know what kimchi is and how it's made? Read about this traditional Korean delicacy, its origins, different types, and methods of preparation. Discover why kimchi has become popular around the world!


Whole Juniper Berries: An Aromatic Spice for Meat, Sauces, and Marinades

Whole Juniper Berries: An Aromatic Spice for Meat, Sauces, and Marinades

Whole juniper berries bring a distinctive evergreen, resinous aroma and a gently bitter-spicy edge that can transform stews, roasts, stocks, and pickles with just a few berries. Used with restraint, they add depth to rich meats and also work surprisingly well in modern soy-based marinades.


Typical Taiwanese dishes: what to taste and how to recognize them

Typical Taiwanese dishes: what to taste and how to recognize them

Taiwanese cuisine is often simplified to bubble tea and night markets, but in reality, it is a distinct and very vibrant culinary world. Typical Taiwanese dishes often rely on rice, noodles, and broths, on small portions and snacking – and especially on texture: delicate vs. crunchy, slippery vs. elastic, starchy vs. broth-based. In this article, you will find an overview of the most famous dishes, how they taste, what makes them typical, and how to practically navigate them.



Worcester

Worcester

Want to know how Worcester sauce can spice up your favorite recipes? Read our article and find out how this versatile condiment adds unique flavor to your dishes!


Allspice: how to use it and what to combine it with?

Allspice: how to use it and what to combine it with?

Whole allspice berries look modest, but a few pieces can transform a pot of broth, rice, or braise. Their aroma sits somewhere between clove, cinnamon, and pepper—warm, gently sweet, and surprisingly versatile. Here’s how to dose them, when to add them, and how to use them in Asian-inspired dishes without overpowering the food.


Black Pepper Stir-Fry (Quick Wok Dinner)

Black Pepper Stir-Fry (Quick Wok Dinner)

This black pepper stir-fry is all about bold aroma, a glossy savory sauce, and crisp-tender vegetables—ready in about 25 minutes. Use chicken, beef, or tofu, and don’t be shy with freshly ground black pepper.


How to start with Taiwanese cuisine: first dishes, flavor logic, and mistakes that unnecessarily hold you back

How to start with Taiwanese cuisine: first dishes, flavor logic, and mistakes that unnecessarily hold you back

Taiwanese cuisine is not just bubble tea and night markets. It is an independent, vibrant, and surprisingly diverse world where several layers of influences meet – and that's exactly why you can enter it smartly and step by step. In this guide, you will clarify what is typical for Taiwanese food, what the "Taiwanese taste" looks like in practice, and which first steps make the most sense at home without having to "cook the whole Taiwan" right away.


Recipe for Adobo with Sauce

Recipe for Adobo with Sauce

Discover the taste of the Philippines! Adobo is a traditional dish that combines unique ingredients and rich history. Try this delicious recipe that will transport you straight to the Philippines—perfect for any occasion!


The taste of Taiwanese cuisine: delicate, broth-based, and surprisingly "textured"

The taste of Taiwanese cuisine: delicate, broth-based, and surprisingly "textured"

Taiwanese cuisine is not just bubble tea and night markets. It is a distinct, lively, and very diverse world where local styles meet various Chinese regional influences, a prominent Hakka layer, indigenous traditions, Japanese heritage, and modern urban food culture. If you really want to understand the Taiwanese taste, it pays to focus less on "spices" and more on broth, precise seasoning, and especially texture.


Argentina Grill Seasoning: a Bold “Grilled” Flavor That Also Works in Asian Cooking

Argentina Grill Seasoning: a Bold “Grilled” Flavor That Also Works in Asian Cooking

Argentina Grill seasoning is the kind of spice blend you reach for when you want instant smoky, roasty “grill energy” on meat, tofu, or vegetables—without planning a marinade. What’s surprising is how naturally it fits into fast Asian-style cooking too: stir-fries, noodles, fried rice, and quick pan sauces all benefit from its warm, savory backbone.


Rosemary: The Aromatic Herb That Lifts Roasts, Potatoes, and Marinades

Rosemary: The Aromatic Herb That Lifts Roasts, Potatoes, and Marinades

Rosemary is one of those herbs that can make a dish taste “finished” with almost no effort. Used sparingly, its piney, resinous aroma deepens roasted meats, vegetables, and olive-oil based marinades—and it can be surprisingly effective in modern Asian-inspired grilling and umami-rich sauces, too.


New ground spices: how they taste and what they are suitable for

New ground spices: how they taste and what they are suitable for

Ground allspice (often called “allspice powder”) is one of those quiet pantry staples that can transform a dish with just a pinch. It’s sweet-warm, intensely aromatic, and surprisingly versatile—useful not only in Western soups and pickling, but also as a subtle depth booster in Asian marinades, stir-fry sauces, and rice.




Fillings, doughs, and cooking methods of dumplings: how to understand Asian dumplings

Fillings, doughs, and cooking methods of dumplings: how to understand Asian dumplings

Dumplings (Asian dumplings and pockets) are not "one dish," but a whole family of bites determined by a trio: filling, wrapper/dough, and cooking method. Once you put these three things together, the differences between jiaozi, gyoza, mandu, wontons, or shumai start to make sense – and especially why some dumplings are for soup, others for the pan, and others for steaming.


Barbecue seasoning: flavor that sticks to meat and vegetables

Barbecue seasoning: flavor that sticks to meat and vegetables

Great grilled flavor isn’t only about smoke and heat—it’s about how seasoning clings to the surface, browns evenly, and stays aromatic from the first flip to the final bite. Here’s a practical guide to choosing and using dry rubs, marinades, and finishing glazes, with simple ideas for adding an Asian-style punch to meat, tofu, and vegetables.


BBQ Grill Seasoning: Smoky, Sweet-Heat Flavor for Meat and Vegetables

BBQ Grill Seasoning: Smoky, Sweet-Heat Flavor for Meat and Vegetables

“Barbecue” isn’t only a sticky sauce—it’s a flavor profile. A good BBQ grill seasoning brings smoky aroma, gentle sweetness, and a peppery kick that works just as well on chicken and ribs as it does on corn, mushrooms, tofu, or eggplant. Here’s how to use it as a dry rub, in a quick marinade, or as a finishing glaze—with a few Asian-inspired twists for extra umami.


Typical Taiwanese Ingredients: What Shapes the Island's Flavor (And How to Start Using Them at Home)

Typical Taiwanese Ingredients: What Shapes the Island's Flavor (And How to Start Using Them at Home)

Taiwanese cuisine is not just bubble tea and night markets. It is an independent and vibrant culinary world where local cooking meets various Chinese regional influences, a distinctive Hakka layer, indigenous traditions, Japanese heritage, and modern urban food culture. That's why it makes sense to start with the ingredients: how they taste, their role in the dish, and how to recognize if you've chosen the right type.


Typical Chinese dishes: overview of groups and what to taste

Typical Chinese dishes: overview of groups and what to taste

Chinese cuisine represents many different worlds of flavors. In this article, you will find an overview of the main groups of typical dishes, representative dishes (what they are and how they taste), practical tips for starting at home, and the most common mistakes to avoid.


Oregano: How It Tastes, What It Pairs With, and Why It Works in Asian-Inspired Cooking

Oregano: How It Tastes, What It Pairs With, and Why It Works in Asian-Inspired Cooking

Oregano is a small herb with a surprisingly bold voice: warm, intensely aromatic, slightly peppery, and able to hold its own in rich sauces and marinades. Most people know it from pizza, but used with a light hand it can also bring depth to modern Asian-inspired “fusion” meals—especially where garlic, chili, soy, sesame, or tomato-based sauces are in play.


Korean BBQ

Korean BBQ

Discover the magic of Korean BBQ! With delicious sauces and tasty side dishes, you'll enjoy an unforgettable grilling experience full of flavors you'll love.


The taste of Filipino cuisine: acidity, vinegar, rice, and umami that hold the food together

The taste of Filipino cuisine: acidity, vinegar, rice, and umami that hold the food together

Filipino cuisine is often simplified to "adobo," but its typical flavor is much broader and above all very practical: rice as the center of the meal, pronounced acidity (often from vinegar), saltiness and umami from soy and fish seasonings, garlic-onion aroma, and a sense for texture as well as complementary sauces. In the article, we will show you how to recognize these flavors in typical dishes and how to safely start with them at home without unnecessary mistakes.


Typical Vietnamese ingredients: what makes Vietnamese food "Vietnamese"

Typical Vietnamese ingredients: what makes Vietnamese food "Vietnamese"

Vietnamese cuisine does not rely on one sauce or one famous dish. It is characterized by freshness, lightness, and the ability to layer multiple flavors so that the result feels lively: rice or rice noodles, herbs and leaves, acidity (lime, tamarind), fermented saltiness and umami (especially fish sauce), and contrasting textures. In this guide, you will find the most important Vietnamese ingredients, their function, and practical tips on how to start using them at home without unnecessary mistakes.




Satay Skewers (Marinated Meat) with Quick Peanut Sauce

Satay Skewers (Marinated Meat) with Quick Peanut Sauce

Satay is Southeast Asia’s iconic grilled skewer: small pieces of meat soaked in a fragrant marinade, cooked fast over high heat, and served with a creamy peanut sauce. This version is easy to make at home on a grill, grill pan, or in the oven—ideal for weeknights and great for sharing.


Recipe for Yakiniku sauce and dish

Recipe for Yakiniku sauce and dish

Discover the taste of Japan with our recipe for Yakiniku – juicy meat, delicious marinades, and grilling right at your table! Simple, quick, and irresistibly delicious!


Traditional Sichuan Stir-Fry (Mála Chicken with Crunchy Veg)

Traditional Sichuan Stir-Fry (Mála Chicken with Crunchy Veg)

This Sichuan-style stir-fry is all about contrast: tender slices of chicken, crisp vegetables, and a bold, glossy sauce with chilli heat and that signature tingly “mála” kick from Sichuan peppercorns. It’s fast, weeknight-friendly, and easy to adapt to whatever you have in the fridge.





Dumplings and Asian dumplings: how to tell apart jiaozi, gyoza, mandu, and dim sum

Dumplings and Asian dumplings: how to tell apart jiaozi, gyoza, mandu, and dim sum

Dumplings (dumplings, pockets, filled buns) are not a single specific dish but a huge family of foods across Asia. They share a simple principle: a dough or starch wrapper holds the filling – or forms a bite on its own without filling. In practice, however, they differ fundamentally: by the type of wrapper, shape, cooking method, and whether they are a quick pan dinner, part of a soup, or dim sum dining. This guide gives you a map to decide by situation, not just by foreign names.


Summer rolls, Asian salads, and cold noodle bowls: how they work and how to assemble them at home

Summer rolls, Asian salads, and cold noodle bowls: how they work and how to assemble them at home

Asian cold dishes are not "lighter versions" of hot cuisine nor just vegetables with dressing. Their strength lies in freshness, herbs, acidity, a strong umami base (often from soy or fish sauces), clever textures, and a dip or dressing that holds the whole meal together. In summer, this gives you a quick lunch, dinner, or practical meal to-go – and often a full main dish, not just a side.


Sticky Honey Soy Ribs (Sweet-Salty Glaze That Clings to Your Fingers)

Sticky Honey Soy Ribs (Sweet-Salty Glaze That Clings to Your Fingers)

These oven-baked ribs get their “restaurant shine” from a simple two-step method: slow, covered roasting until tender, then quick high-heat glazing with a honey–soy sauce reduction scented with garlic and ginger. The result is deeply savory, gently sweet, and irresistibly sticky.


Parsley Leaf: the quiet herb that lifts soups, fish and marinades

Parsley Leaf: the quiet herb that lifts soups, fish and marinades

Parsley leaf is easy to overlook because it rarely steals the spotlight—but that’s exactly why it’s so useful. A small pinch can brighten a broth, clean up a rich sauce, and add a fresh green finish to fish or grilled meats. Fresh and dried versions behave differently, so knowing when to use which makes everyday cooking noticeably more balanced.


Provençal seasoning: a blend of herbs that enhances both vegetables and meat

Provençal seasoning: a blend of herbs that enhances both vegetables and meat

Provençal seasoning—often sold as “Herbs de Provence”—is a fragrant mix of dried Mediterranean herbs that can make everyday food taste more rounded and aromatic in seconds. It’s a classic for roasted vegetables and grilled meats, but it also fits surprisingly well into simple Asian-style meals when you want extra aroma without adding complexity.


Kung Pao Chicken Stir-Fry (Quick, Spicy & Nutty)

Kung Pao Chicken Stir-Fry (Quick, Spicy & Nutty)

Kung Pao chicken is a classic Sichuan-style stir-fry built on contrasts: tender bites of chicken, crunchy peanuts, fragrant dried chilies, and that signature sweet-sour-salty heat. This version is streamlined for home cooking while keeping the bold flavor balance that makes Kung Pao so addictive.


Typical Filipino ingredients: what makes the taste of the Philippines and how to start with them at home

Typical Filipino ingredients: what makes the taste of the Philippines and how to start with them at home

Filipino cuisine is not just adobo. It is island "home" cooking based on rice, pronounced acidity (often from vinegar), salty seasonings with a touch of fermentation, and an aromatic base of garlic, onion, and pepper. In this guide, you will clarify which ingredients are truly typical for the Philippines, their role in dishes, how to recognize the right type, and what to avoid with your first purchases.



Ground Ginger in Asian Cooking: How to Use It for Full Aroma and Flavor

Ground Ginger in Asian Cooking: How to Use It for Full Aroma and Flavor

Ground ginger is one of those quiet pantry spices that can make a dish taste instantly more “Asian”—warm, gently peppery, and lightly citrusy. Used well, it boosts curries, marinades, stir-fries, and dipping sauces without adding fibrous bits or extra prep. Here’s how to choose it, when it beats fresh ginger, and how to add it so it actually smells and tastes vibrant (not dusty or bitter).






Rice noodles

Rice noodles

Discover the fascinating world of rice noodles! Whether it's delicate vermicelli noodles, wide slices, or tapioca varieties, these noodles are the basis of many Asian dishes. In our article, you will learn about their history, how they are made, and how you can incorporate them into your own culinary creations. Immerse yourself in traditional flavors and textures that will introduce you to the secrets of Asian cuisine!


Ground White Mustard Seed: Flavor, Timing, and Smart Ways to Use It

Ground White Mustard Seed: Flavor, Timing, and Smart Ways to Use It

Ground white mustard seed is a quiet workhorse in the spice cupboard: it brings a gentle heat, a warm mustard aroma, and extra “body” to sauces and marinades. Used well, it can deepen everything from salad dressings and rubs to Asian-style curries and stir-fry sauces—without overpowering the dish.


Thyme: What It Tastes Like, When to Add It, and What It Pairs With

Thyme: What It Tastes Like, When to Add It, and What It Pairs With

Thyme may look modest, but it brings a deep, savory herbal note that can make simple food taste more “finished”. Learn how thyme behaves in cooking (fresh vs. dried), the best timing for adding it, and pairing ideas—including smart ways to use it alongside umami-rich Asian pantry staples.


White Mustard Seeds: Flavor, Heat, and Smart Ways to Use Them in Cooking

White Mustard Seeds: Flavor, Heat, and Smart Ways to Use Them in Cooking

White mustard seeds may look modest, but they can add a warm, gently peppery depth to everything from quick stir-fries to pickles and marinades. Here’s what they taste like, how they differ from brown/black mustard seeds, and when to use them whole versus ground—especially in Asian-inspired cooking.


The most common mistakes in seasoning: spices, herbs, sauces, and marinades without unnecessary errors

The most common mistakes in seasoning: spices, herbs, sauces, and marinades without unnecessary errors

Seasoning in Asian cuisine often matters more than the recipe itself. It's not just about spiciness or adding salt at the end. Flavor is built in layers: some develop when toasting spices, some in the sauce or marinade, and some only at the very end with fresh herbs or final condiments. In this article, we will go through the most common mistakes, why they happen, and more importantly, how to easily fix them in practice.


Potato Starch: The Quiet Trick Behind Extra Crispy Coatings and Silky Sauces

Potato Starch: The Quiet Trick Behind Extra Crispy Coatings and Silky Sauces

Potato starch doesn’t look like much, but it can change the texture of your cooking in minutes. Used the right way, it turns pan sauces glossy, helps soups feel rounder without tasting “floury,” and creates a light, shatteringly crisp crust on tofu, chicken, mushrooms, or vegetables—one of the small restaurant-style techniques that shows up again and again in Asian home cooking.


Garlic Marinade: How to Get the Most Out of It (Especially in Asian-Style Cooking)

Garlic Marinade: How to Get the Most Out of It (Especially in Asian-Style Cooking)

Garlic marinade is one of those kitchen shortcuts that doesn’t feel like a shortcut: it can make chicken, pork, tofu, or vegetables taste deeper, smell incredible, and stay juicier—fast. The trick is knowing how garlic behaves with heat, how long to marinate different ingredients, and how to balance sweet, salty, and acidic notes for Asian-inspired results.


Seasoning Game Meat: How to Bring Out Rich Flavor (and Add an Asian Twist)

Seasoning Game Meat: How to Bring Out Rich Flavor (and Add an Asian Twist)

Game meat such as venison or wild boar has a deeper, more “forest” character than farmed meats—often leaner, sometimes slightly earthy, always worth treating with care. The right seasoning doesn’t mask that flavor; it frames it. Here’s a practical guide to classic pairings (juniper, pepper, herbs) plus Asian-inspired ideas—citrus, aromatics, chili, and layered umami—that can make game taste cleaner, rounder, and more modern.



Ramen Noodles: How to Choose Them, Cook Them Right, and Pair Them for the Best Flavor

Ramen Noodles: How to Choose Them, Cook Them Right, and Pair Them for the Best Flavor

Broth, toppings, aroma oil—ramen gets a lot of attention for what’s on top. But the real backbone of the bowl is the noodle: springy, satisfying, and able to carry flavor. Here’s a practical guide to ramen noodles (fresh, dried, instant), how to cook them for the ideal bite, and how to use them not only in soup but also in quick stir-fries and “no-broth” bowls.


Peanut butter

Peanut butter

Immerse yourself in the world of this delicious ingredient, which not only tastes great but also offers a host of health benefits. Discover how it is made and what advantages it brings to your health and everyday diet!


Steaming dumplings and bao: how to achieve the right texture, selection, and common mistakes

Steaming dumplings and bao: how to achieve the right texture, selection, and common mistakes

Steaming is one of the techniques in Asian dumplings that most determines the outcome: whether the wrapper will be soft and elastic or, on the contrary, soggy, heavy, or "rubbery." In this guide, you'll clarify exactly what steaming means, which types of dumplings and bao are most commonly steamed, how to choose (especially with frozen pieces), and how to avoid mistakes that ruin texture and flavor.


Takoyaki, satay and other handheld foods: how to navigate Asian street food

Takoyaki, satay and other handheld foods: how to navigate Asian street food

Asian street food is often simplified to “something to eat with your hands.” But its strength lies elsewhere: in speed, in a single stall’s specialization in a few dishes, in a clear local identity and in a flavor you “read” from the first bite. In this guide we’ll show where takoyaki, satay and other street classics belong — and how to choose a style that will taste good at home too.


Light and balanced Asian dishes: how “lightness” works in the bowl and on the plate

Light and balanced Asian dishes: how “lightness” works in the bowl and on the plate

Light and balanced Asian dishes are not “diet versions” of classics or flavorless meals. In many parts of Asia, lightness is a natural result of how a dish is composed: what forms the base (rice or noodles), what carries the protein, what adds freshness, acidity, texture, and how a sauce or broth is used so that the ingredients are not overwhelmed.


How to replace meat in Asian dishes: flavor, umami, and texture without compromise

How to replace meat in Asian dishes: flavor, umami, and texture without compromise

Replacing meat in an Asian dish does not mean "finding one substitute." In practice, it is much more important to understand the role meat plays in a specific dish – whether it provides texture, carries the sauce, builds the broth, or creates a "grilled" impression. Once you distinguish this, the plant-based version can be full, umami, and convincingly flavorful.


Typical Filipino dishes: adobo, sinigang, kinilaw and sisig (and how to understand them at the table)

Typical Filipino dishes: adobo, sinigang, kinilaw and sisig (and how to understand them at the table)

Filipino cuisine has a clear identity, but it cannot be reduced to a single "national" dish. Typical Filipino dishes only make sense when you understand three things: rice is the center of the plate, sourness and saltiness are the main flavor axis, and vinegar and salty seasonings play an important role. In this article, we will show you four representative dishes (adobo, sinigang, kinilaw, sisig) and practically explain how to eat them and why they taste the way they do.


Filipino home-cooked meals: what they taste like and how to understand them

Filipino home-cooked meals: what they taste like and how to understand them

Filipino cuisine is home-style, practical, and surprisingly diverse. To understand it, knowing just one "national" dish is not enough – it is important to understand the role of rice, how acidity and saltiness work, why vinegar is so prominent, and how main dishes, soup, side dishes, and sauces interact on the table. The article provides guidance on typical home dishes (adobo, sinigang, kinilaw, sisig), regional differences, and specific tips on how to start cooking Filipino food at home.


How to Choose Soy Sauce: Types, Uses, and Common Mistakes

How to Choose Soy Sauce: Types, Uses, and Common Mistakes

Soy sauce is often the first "Asian" bottle at home – and also one of the most common reasons why a dish ends up just vaguely salty. Under one name, there is an entire family of styles: from light working sauces for the wok to dark varieties for color, rounding, and sometimes a sweeter tone. In this guide, you will clarify the types, what to watch for on the label, and how to dose soy sauce so that it adds depth – not just salt.

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