Culture & Food
About the Culture and Food Section
Filipino culture is one of the most misunderstood in Southeast Asia. This is partly because the Philippines presents a surface that’s immediately accessible to Western visitors (English-speaking, Catholic, outwardly familiar). It’s also partly because what lies beneath that surface takes real time and genuine curiosity to understand. The festivals that appear in travel magazines are real, but they represent perhaps five percent of what Filipino cultural life actually is. This section is about the other ninety-five.
Food is the right place to start. Filipino cuisine has long been underestimated, even by Filipinos themselves. It’s shaped by generations of colonial influence into ambivalence about their own culinary traditions. What’s happening now is a genuine reckoning. Chefs, home cooks, food writers, and farmers are digging back into regional traditions that never made it onto restaurant menus. They are recovering techniques and ingredients that were nearly lost. And they are asking what Filipino food actually is when it’s not performing for an outside audience. The guides here follow that conversation, not just recipes and restaurant recommendations, but the history and argument behind the food.
The same depth of attention applies to the rest of this section. The significance of fiestas beyond their photographic spectacle is one example; another is the complexity of Filipino family structures and their meaning for everyday social life; and no evaluation of the Philippines would be complete without considering how Catholicism has been absorbed and transformed into something distinctly Filipino. Then there is the regional identities that persist and strengthen even as Manila exerts its gravitational pull; the art, music, and literature that most visitors never encounter. There are also honest discussions of the aspects of Philippine culture that can be difficult to understand from the outside — the dynamics of class, the weight of colonial history, the gap between public and private life.
This section doesn’t try to explain the Philippines. It tries to give you better questions to ask it.,








