Lasang Pinoy II: Talangka and Gulgoria (Cooking Up a Storm!)
Biscuits, Breads & Cakes, Guest Bloggers, Lasang Pinoy, Perfectly Sweet September 29th, 2005by Manny Soriano
The following entry is contributed by a Filipino-Canadian food and music enthusiast. He was born and educated in the Philippines and migrated to Canada in 1971. His mother was an excellent and practical pastry and savoury cook who operated a hotel with his father who was a coffee and cigar connoisseur. Manny started baking in highschool and worked as an accountant till 1999. He took baking courses since 1990 and opened a Filipino pastry shop in the west end of Toronto in 2000.
The hurricane that recently submerged the American gulf region has a particular vivid resonance for us Filipinos because the majority of us who have not left home live through the same fear and threat year in and year out. It seems that political leaderships everywhere are all alike in being blind, deaf and dumb to this never ever unforseeable disasters. In the coastal area of Tondo, the project that was designed to lessen the problem ended up aggravating it through corruption and bungling. Now they have flood all year round. How do our resilient people cope and survive, go on with their lives and rebuild? The only patch left to them for refuge is dangerously sloped and rather slippery at that.
You hear talk of the ruinous effects of global warming getting louder each year. That there is going to be stronger hurricanes, that more frequent floods will marinate more low-lying areas. But shall we claim that we have already been living through all these grim conditions in the last two centuries for which we have written account? The Spaniards summed up our climate as “cuatro meses de polvo, cuatro meses de lodo, cuatro meses de todo.” That adds up to two-thirds of the year being wet season. So apt then of Bino Realuyo to call his coming-of-age novel “Umbrella Country” or of our great painters invariably depicting Habagat (Monsoon) as a dark and sullen giant.
Separated from reality by time and distance though, the more fortunate among us who have established a foot-hold abroad only have kind memories to summon, remembrances of our care-free childhood, of house-bound days, of crowding in the kitchen for warmth or to join the rest of the family in turning out damp weather favorites and of immense pleasures and enjoyment afterwards. The hurricane harried fishpond owners of my town might have lived in constant fear of breached levées or of the swarming pests that ravage the food of his precious bangus but for us kids the rain was welcome because it brought with it talangka in abundance. Mother simply salted them and left them overnight for breakfast or lunch. Nothing spells out tag-ulan for me more than my meals of burong talangka with a squeeze of kalamansi, dayap or even kabuyaw. Even later on, when the enjoyment of eating them was severely tainted with the risk of deadly diseases.
But when trully inclement weather forbade us kids to even venture out, we gathered round the kitchen table to watch mother make empanadas or actually lend our small hands in turning out gulgoria*. The memory of those empanadas was what prodded me later on to develop a recipe that I could use in my shop that sold empanadas alone and hopia. The remembrance of making gulgoria with the whole family though rolls up into one neat little package all those gentler and more peaceful days of youth.
* For those who are not familiar with gulgoria, it is a syrup-glaced fried cookie formed by rolling with your thumb a small ball of dough against a section of banana trunk (saha). It is exactly the size and appearance of gnocci.
Gulgoria
1/2 cup lard or butter
2 cups all purpose flour
1 teaspoon baking powder
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/4 cup or less milk
1 egg
A fresh batch of fying oil

Mix together all the ingredients until a stiff dough is formed. Knead until smooth. Roll into a rope less than an inch in diameter. Pinch off from this rope pieces the size of large marbles. Roll into a ball, flatten and press against a fork, pick up one end roll into a loose shell. This is a family project up to this point.
Always make sure that kitchen is free of children when deep frying or making syrup. Fry until golden brown. Dump into the prepared syrup and coat evenly by turning with a wooden spoon.
Syrup
1/2 cup sugar
2 tablespoons water
Place sugar and water in a frypan over medium heat stirring occasionally until the syrup reaches candy stage, that’s when the syrup dripping from the lifted stirring spoon forms into thread.
(After this recipe, gnocchi here I come! - Karen)
Update: The round-up for Lasang Pinoy II: Cooking Up a Storm! is now available.
Update by Karen (11 October): the picture on the left are the gorgoria that I bought at the Likha ng Central Luzon Trade Fair. They are from Bataan. Texture and taste-wise, they are very similar to pilipit, a braided or twisted Filipino biscuit. If I want my gorgoria to turn out this way, perhaps I should substantially lessen the amount of butter and milk in the recipe above.
Tagged with: Lasang Pinoy #2


September 30th, 2005 at 2:28 pm
Hi Karen. Ang galing galing mong sumulat. You even filled my tummy.
September 30th, 2005 at 2:38 pm
Totoo!, magaling ka talagang sumulat Karen. At pati si Manny Soriano. Ako hindi magaling mag-type. Mabilis lang mag-click ng “Enter”.
September 30th, 2005 at 3:35 pm
Great post Manny Soriano
I have never heard of Gulgoria before but they yummy! 
September 30th, 2005 at 3:57 pm
I think I’ve had these biscuits although probably under a diff alias? Would it be very similar to the texture of pilipit?
Thanks for joining us Manny with a very good post !
September 30th, 2005 at 8:19 pm
ang galing talaga ni Manny!!! bow ako! baka puedeng tanungin pangalan ng shop n’ya sa toronto in case maligaw kami doon? Thanks for joining us for LP, Manny! Hope to see more of you!
there’s an easier way to make gnocchi — though not as pretty — run through a pastry tube with the big hole and snip with scissors straight into the cooking liquid. yum! baka puede rin i-apply ang technique — though i would imagine the syrup getting into the grooves in the dough is what adds to its distinctive texture.
September 30th, 2005 at 8:39 pm
Shall we direct all your kind comments to Karen who provided the 90% perspiration for my measly 10% of inspiration. Thanks Karen for all the hard work.
October 1st, 2005 at 2:13 am
Oh yey! The picture is up! And they look absolutely delicious!!! Ayayay! I know this is going to sound horribly ignorant but…where can I get them here in the Philippines? I swear I have never come across them…but I sure would like to!
October 1st, 2005 at 2:18 am
Ok, I just realized the recipe is right in front of my nose! But still would like to know where I could find them…
October 1st, 2005 at 6:42 am
Jun de Marikina! Hahaha! Mabilis ding magpatawa. Thanks for the compliment.
Celia, the texture is actually a cross between a cream puff and the dough of empanada. Delicious!
Joey, gulgoria/gorgoria is actually one of our endangered recipes. I am not sure if anyone still cooks it but as far as my research goes, it used to be common in Central Luzon. I’ve heard it from old Bulacan families. My Lola used to talk about them. Manny’s originally from Bataan. Wouldn’t it be fun to trace this recipe’s origin?
Hahaha! Here I go again.
But honestly, try whipping up a batch. It’s very easy and very fun to do even by yourself.
October 3rd, 2005 at 2:43 pm
ms. karen,
you got me to this site. i can cook but am not a kitchen person.
do you have recipe of kilawin tugak?
October 3rd, 2005 at 2:45 pm
Nice to hear about that Filipino bakeshop. Can we have the address? I have a friend who is languishing in Canada who might be comforted with empanada and hopia.
Great writing style, a very good way of preserving the endangered members of Filipino cuisine.
May I ask, how far is it in taste and texture to fried donuts? Sounds like they are made the same way.
October 3rd, 2005 at 8:30 pm
I traded Super Baker early this year for longer stays in Brazil and hikes to Compostela. Gulgoria was in deep-freeze of memory until a friend from Cabanatuan I was having coffee with asked for french crullers and right after a bite said “lasang gulroria to’wa.” It’s Proust’s madeleines for me. Good gulgoria is actually crisp-crumbly though.
October 4th, 2005 at 7:51 am
Jo, if you can’t cook, you’re not worthy of the name! Auntie Fanny says someone looking for kilawing tugac is not… just ask her.
Kai, at least the ones I tried out taste and feel almost like old-style empanada.
Apicio, no wonder an old lady told me once they crumble like polvoron. Perhaps I should lessen the amount of milk and fry them till crisp.
February 4th, 2006 at 7:48 am
May I know the the bakeshop of manny in Toronto if he has one
M
March 8th, 2006 at 9:29 pm
wow thank you dakal a salamat ha for the nice recipe of palipit
January 31st, 2007 at 6:43 am
Just curious, someone mentioned that Manny soriano is from Bataan. Which part of Bataan? I am from Abucay Bataan and somewhere in my lineage is a Soriano ancestor.
November 12th, 2007 at 2:31 pm
January 14th, 2008 at 12:06 pm
I have been longing for the recipe. I forgot to ask my Mom (Lorna), Manny’s sister in PI when we went for a visit last X’mas. I remember my Lola Lilim’s (tITO MANNY’S MOM) “Gurguria” that is how we pronouce it. It was so good. Good hiding Tito Manny. I found you. Send us an e-mail one time. This is Dindin.
February 20th, 2008 at 2:49 am
I thought they only make this in my town of Tanza, Cavite. I guess, it’s well known in Bataan also.