Dinuguan with Puto: Filipino Savory Pork Blood Stew

Dinuguan with Puto: Filipino Savory Pork Blood Stew - Pork Dinuguan with Puto at Cafe Laguna.

Filipino classic | Pork blood stew | Puto pairing

Dinuguan is savory, tangy, and rich, a pork stew traditionally paired with soft puto for contrast.

Why make it: This version handles the ingredient clearly and respectfully, with shopping notes for cooks who are curious but new to dinuguan.

Prep20 min
Cook1 hr
Rest10 min
Makes6 servings

What Is Dinuguan with Puto?

Dinuguan is a Filipino stew made with pork, vinegar, aromatics, chiles, and pork blood, usually served with rice or puto.

Why You Will Love It

  • Practical for U.S. kitchens: the recipe uses ingredients and substitutions a home cook can realistically shop for.
  • Built for the table: the serving notes match how the dish usually lands in Filipino-American homes, from weeknights to merienda to parties.
  • Flexible without erasing the dish: swaps are named clearly so the original idea stays visible.
  • Easy to cook through: the shopping list, timings, and storage notes make the recipe straightforward to test and adjust.

Ingredient Notes

For the main ingredient

Choose fresh, good-quality ingredients and cut them evenly so Dinuguan with Puto cooks predictably.

For the sauce

Taste near the end; Filipino stews and braises should feel balanced with rice, not flat on their own.

Dinuguan with Puto Recipe

This version handles the ingredient clearly and respectfully, with shopping notes for cooks who are curious but new to dinuguan.

Shopping List

  • pork shoulder
  • pork blood
  • cane vinegar
  • garlic
  • onion
  • ginger optional
  • long chiles
  • fish sauce
  • puto
  • rice

Ingredients

Pork

  • 1 1/2 pounds pork shoulder or belly, diced
  • Salt and pepper
  • 1 tablespoon oil

Sauce

  • 1 onion, minced
  • 6 garlic cloves, minced
  • 1/2 cup cane vinegar
  • 2 cups water or broth
  • 1 cup pork blood
  • Fish sauce

For Serving

  • Puto
  • Steamed rice
  • Sliced chiles

Instructions

  1. Prepare and season the main ingredients so they are ready before the pot gets hot.
  2. Cook the aromatics in oil until fragrant and lightly softened.
  3. Add the main protein or vegetables and cook long enough to build flavor.
  4. Pour in the sauce or broth ingredients and bring to a steady simmer.
  5. Cook until tender, adding vegetables in stages so each one keeps the right texture.
  6. Taste and adjust salt, acidity, sweetness, or heat before serving.
  7. Rest briefly, then serve hot with rice or the suggested sides.

Tips For The Best Dinuguan with Puto

  • Build flavor early: Take time with aromatics before adding liquid.
  • Add vegetables in stages: This keeps soft vegetables from dissolving.
  • Taste with rice in mind: The sauce should be slightly bold because rice softens it.
  • Rest before serving: A short rest helps the flavors settle.

How To Serve And Store

Serve hot with steamed rice and a simple vegetable side. Refrigerate leftovers in a covered container for up to 4 days and reheat gently.

Common Questions

Can I make Dinuguan with Puto ahead?

Yes. Most Filipino stews and braises taste even better after resting overnight.

Can I use a different cut?

Usually yes, as long as you adjust the cooking time for tenderness.

Can I make it less salty?

Use low-sodium soy sauce or fish sauce sparingly, then adjust at the end.

Can I freeze it?

Saucy meat dishes freeze well; vegetable-heavy dishes are best eaten fresh or refrigerated.

What detail makes Dinuguan with Puto taste like home for you? Share your family version or testing notes in the comments.

Recipe inspiration and technique reference: Filipino home-cooking source research from Panlasang Pinoy, Kawaling Pinoy, and Filipino-American cooking sources in the site roadmap.

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