This Law-Uy recipe is from the Aviles family, owners of Lachi’s Cake Shop in Davao. Mike Aviles shares that Delia Dadapan, their staff of over 30 years, shared that the usual law-uy has shredded fried fish and traditionally does not have bananas. “We find that this version has a ‘cleaner’ taste without the fish, and the bananas make it pleasantly sweet,” he says.
Similar Filipino Vegetable Dishes
Filipino cuisine, given its archipelagic geography, has a lot of comparable dishes that are made slightly distinct only by the name and available ingredients in the region. These can be considered the variations of Law-Uy.
- Dinengdeng – a brothy dish from Ilocos that’s seasoned with fermented fish paste
- Bulanglang – a dish from Batangas that uses rice wash and dried fish
- Laswa – a leafy vegetable dish from Western Visayas that incorporates leafy vegetables
Recipe by Mike Aviles, Mateo Ty, and Millet Aviles Ty of Lachi’s Cake Shop Davao.
How to obtain rice washing:
When cooking rice, rinse grains in water and throw out first wash. Add more water and stir rice with fingers. Pour out rice grains into a strainer reserving the second rice washing for this dish. The starch from the rice grains gives the law-uy a more viscous, nutritious broth.
