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Vegan and Vegetarian Philippines: Where to Eat and What to Order

Vegan and Vegetarian Philippines: Where to Eat and What to Order

Filipino cuisine is famously meat-forward - lechon, adobo, and sinigang are national icons. But the Philippines also has abundant tropical fruits, extraordinary vegetables, and a strong Buddhist vegetarian cooking tradition. Vegan and vegetarian travelers can eat brilliantly here with a little knowledge.

The Key Challenge

The word vegetarian is sometimes interpreted loosely. Dishes described as vegetarian might contain shrimp paste (bagoong), fish sauce (patis), or pork lard. Always ask: Walang karne, walang isda, walang baboy? (No meat, no fish, no pork?) and for vegans add: Walang itlog, walang gatas? (No eggs, no dairy?)

Naturally Vegan and Vegetarian Filipino Dishes

Pinakbet (vegetable version): stewed bitter melon, eggplant, okra, squash, and tomatoes - ask for it without bagoong. Gising-Gising: spicy coconut milk dish with green beans and chili, completely plant-based without pork. Laing: taro leaves in coconut milk and chili. Adobong Kangkong: water spinach cooked adobo-style without meat. Turon: banana and jackfruit spring rolls - almost always vegan. Banana cue and kamote cue: caramelized banana or sweet potato on sticks - completely vegan street snacks.

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Incredible Philippine Fruits

Green mango with salt and vinegar (a national obsession), ripe mango (arguably the worlds best), jackfruit (langka) as a savory meat substitute, fresh coconut (buko), durian, marang, lanzones, rambutan, santol, and atis (sugar apple).

Best Cities for Plant-Based Dining

Manila: Corner Tree Cafe (Makati), Pipino Vegetarian, Advocado Kitchen (QC). Siargao: health-conscious cafes in General Luna with acai bowls and plant-based burgers. El Nido: several restaurants on Calle Hama and Real Street with dedicated vegetarian menus.

Buddhist Vegetarian Restaurants

Chinese Buddhist communities have maintained pure vegetarian restaurants throughout the Philippines for generations. Look for Chinese temples with attached vegetarian canteens serving mock meat dishes from tofu and mushrooms.

Practical Phrases

I am vegetarian: Vegetariano/a ako. No meat: Walang karne. No pork: Walang baboy. No fish sauce: Walang patis. No shrimp paste: Walang bagoong.

The Coconut Kitchen

Philippine cooking reliance on coconut makes many dishes naturally rich and satisfying for vegans. Ginataan dishes (cooked in coconut milk) adapt beautifully to vegetable-only cooking. With a little knowledge and clear communication, you will eat wonderfully in the Philippines.

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