Monday, October 10, 2005

Balut: You want 12 day, 16 day, or 18 day?

Cebu, Philippines.

I've done the edible egg embryo before in other countries, but I've always wanted to try it in the Philippines. I first heard of this popular snack from perhaps a National Geographic article on the Philippines, and for years I wondered if I could stomach them. I have several times now.

They're duck embryos, but there was a rumor going around today in Cebu that a vendor had been spotted selling "chicken balut", which my acquaintences agreed was a silly idea and just didn't taste as good as the duck ones. I can't be sure; we didn't see him tonight.



As I said before, when I ate them in Cambodia, I actually quite liked them and it's probably my favorite tasting weird meat. I haven't tried them side-by-side, of course, but the Philippine balut resembled the Cambodian ones in every respect I can recall.

First you choose between 12 day, 16 day, and 18 day. The 12 day ones are just hard-boiled eggs with no embryonic development. The 16 day ones are further along but concensus was that these are just inferior to the king of balut -- exactly 18 days after being laid.



After you choose what kind you want, the vendor grabs them piping hot from the basket and passes you a little stool, salt, and a vinegar-onion sauce. You hold the hot egg and flick carefully but forcefully at the top of it with your middle finger. It cracks a bit and you gently remove a small hole from the top, so you can sip the savory broth before removing the whole shell. I agree that the 18-day one is better than the younger ones. You might come across some small chunkies but it's usually just eaten all the way through, in about 3 mouthful bites. You can see feathers, head, wings, and skeleton forming, but it's basically an extra-chewy easter egg. The flavor is savory and delicious; the texture satisfying. Match with a light pilsner beer.



If you're in Cebu City looking for the balut, I got mine from a street vendor at Fuente Osmena circle. He was really helpful and knowledgable, and proud of his product. The cool thing about traveling in the Philippines is that most everyone speaks English, so don't be shy to ask questions.
----
Addition: Found more info on balut. The eggs are from the "itik duck" which is native to the Philippines. Itik mother ducks are lazy so humans have to incubate them after the mother ignores them. That explains a lot. More info here.

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20 Comments:

At Tuesday, 28 February, 2006, Anonymous Anonymous said...

no way in hell i am going to eat an entire raw ducklin! it is observe even by my standard. there are sh!t and fur in it.

 
At Thursday, 02 March, 2006, Anonymous Da Ma said...

Went to the night market at the end of Wanfujing in Beijing and tried something similar, Mao Ji Dan - hairy eggs. Part egg part chicken embryos skewered on a stick (those chinese just love to shove anything on a stick and cook it). Now the actual idea of eating an embryonic chicken doesnt bother me but the taste did, never have i tasted a chicken based product so bad!(one bite was enough binned it after that).
Also tried a whole host of weird meat shoved on a stick at that market, Goats Balls which were big and tasty just a bit chewy when u get to the middle. Silk worms which are okay but a bit soft. Starfish which is okay again but not particularily tasty. Sparrows on stick with a bit of Chilli sauce which were great, then frogs on a stick which were completely flavourless (which is strange considering how good frogs legs taste). The fried centipede gave me indigestion (think they put too much salt on it), the best tasting was definetly the fried scorpions.
There was also turtles eggs and seahorses on a skewer for sale, but didnt try either of those.

 
At Saturday, 04 March, 2006, Anonymous Anonymous said...

it's not raw! it's boiled!

 
At Monday, 03 April, 2006, Anonymous Anonymous said...

My mom said you're satanic and "of the devil" when she saw this page. Haha!

 
At Wednesday, 05 July, 2006, Anonymous Anonymous said...

t'es trop fort mec , je sais pas comment tu as fais mais t'as du courage!!

 
At Tuesday, 03 October, 2006, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Fantastic site, kind of interesting that I've tried at least half of your 'weird list'! Another great egg dish to try is Thousand year egg (pi dan) which is duck eggs covered in mud/spices and buried in ash of some kind for a few weeks. The egg white turns a translucent dark green while the yolk is this gelatinous mixture. Add a little Chinese vinegar and its ready to go!

 
At Thursday, 09 November, 2006, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Bravo. Everything was well explained. I cannot do it better, though I grew up in the Philippines. Keep up the good work.
regards,
Hans Aseoche
haseoche.blogspot.com

 
At Thursday, 11 January, 2007, Anonymous Anonymous said...

omg!! sorry to say but i don't think i will ever eat that. The worst thing i have ever ate was a worm it was discuting! Tt crawled around in my mouth!! i don't thing i could eat that especaily because u could see the poor chick!

 
At Friday, 02 March, 2007, Anonymous Anonymous said...

lol, i'm from the philippines and we're glad you liked it :P like the other guy said everything was well-explained.. keep up the good work :)

 
At Tuesday, 17 April, 2007, Anonymous dimaks said...

Balut is healthy :) but not if you eat too much - watch out high blood pressure, hehe.

Nice blog here! interesting food adventures!!! keep em coming!

 
At Tuesday, 05 June, 2007, Anonymous Anonymous said...

I went to the Phils to meet my girlfriend and her family. I wanted to try everything, including Balut and Durian.
We were at her family's farm when her brother returned from town with the Balut. She said "Your Balut are here." So we walked outside and she prepared it just like you said. Then she yelled "SEE THE KANO EAT BALUT!!!" The family came running and gathered around to watch the Kano eat his first Balut.
I thoroughly enjoyed it and they were all VERY disappointed! They filtered away because I did not provide any entertainment. LOL!
It tasted like a very good hard boiled egg.
....now the Durian was a different matter!!

 
At Friday, 22 June, 2007, Blogger El Nino said...

Just FYI, in Indonesian and Malay(and probably in tagalog slang as well), "itik" just means "duck", so I don't think it's a special breed.

Cheers,
Malaysian

 
At Sunday, 09 September, 2007, Anonymous Maris said...

"Itik" is different from "Duck", el Nino. Though, they may be of the same class. "Itik" has black feather while duck has white or a combination of both. Duck is usually fatter than "Itik". Itik was raised in a field while duck can be raised at house backyard. The taste of their meat is also different.

 
At Tuesday, 30 October, 2007, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Balut Eggs are so intense! Have you seen this video? Check it out - you can see the baby duck's heart beating!!!

http://youtube.com/watch?v=EpUW0b8G9Dk

 
At Monday, 12 November, 2007, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Balut cheap and also nutritious.Men here in the Phils. regard them as aphrodisiacs....try one! :P

 
At Thursday, 24 January, 2008, Anonymous John said...

Cooking Instructions at John's Cuisines. The all-time Filipino favorite dishes are now unveiled to the whole world. Hosted by John-Eric Taburada

Hello everybody...

To those who want to see me cook... click the link at YouTube!

COOKING PAKLAY:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bp3VhBGT6x8

COOKING BALUT:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dt9i58E0_FQ

Those who want to contribute and share their special recipes (Filipino dishes only), kindly send them to me for evaluation. Selected recipes will be given a schedule for cooking and filming or photography; and will be featured at YouTube with your name as the CONTRIBUTOR.

To support this intention, please forward this information to your friends...

Thank you very much... Pinoys rule the world!

 
At Thursday, 20 March, 2008, Anonymous jana said...

ohh i missed those weid stuff in cebu, thats weird and bizarre but yum hahaha

 
At Wednesday, 26 March, 2008, Anonymous Anonymous said...

"At Tuesday, 28 February, 2006, Anonymous said...
no way in hell i am going to eat an entire raw ducklin! it is observe even by my standard. there are sh!t and fur in it.
"


With the comment above - the person can even spell! It's absurd, NOT "observe". Anyway, you can order the 15 or 16 day balut and it does not have feathers in it - the embryo is not fully developed. The feathered, more developed embryo is more a delicacy of the Vietnamese people.

 
At Monday, 31 March, 2008, Anonymous Anonymous said...

it's sooooo good...by the way, it's not raw...i don't pass judgement on anyone else's food unless i've tried it at least once...

 
At Monday, 07 April, 2008, Anonymous alex UK said...

ABSOLUTELY SHAME ON YOU. ARE YOU GOING TO BOIL A PUPPY OR KITTEN NEXT??? i have pet ducks and they survive at this age. Yo are boiling them alive, may someone boil your foot and eat it

 

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