
Tausug Wedding Food
Food
habits vary from one cultural group to another. These are
the products of their environment as well as historical experiences.
These food habits become meaningful to them and are carefully
held and difficult to change. Because each culture differs
from the others, people see and understand things in different
ways. Anyone, therefore, who plans to change or modify a food
habit must first understand the cultural orientation and perception
of the people.
In Tausug culture,
several rituals are followed before the wedding day. There
are four stages in a Tausug marriage. The Pagpasihil
is the process of "probing" whether the boy is acceptable
to the family and relatives of the girl. The nest stage is
the Pag-pangasawa or asking for the hand in marriage.
Having been accepted formally, the next stage is Pag-turul
taimah, which means to follow the acceptance. The last
stage is the Pag-Tiaun or the formal wedding.
The wedding feast
is prepared on the eve of the wedding. The quantity prepared
depends upon the number of guests expected. The more affluent
parents slaughter two or more cows and cook several sacks
of rice for the occasion. The tiula itim (black soup)
is a favorite dish and is prepared in large quantities in
a cawa (vat) or big pot. Rice is cooked in a big
cooking pot or in empty kerosene cans. Native cakes are prepared
some days before the wedding day. Food served on this day
is similar to the food served during the pag-turul taimah,
such as kurma, sati, kari-kari,
piassak, tiulah, sambal, and tiulah
itum. Prepared viands are placed in a room where some
women are signed to facilitate the allocating and serving
of food on the trays. The native cakes served with coffee
before lunch are bulha (small cakes of different
shapes and designs), hantak or kukus (small
fried cakes in various shapes) and bang-bang paklud
(banana fritters and the like). The feast is served on long
tables arranged in the panggong (temporary shed)
constructed adjacent to the house for the occasion.
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The popular baulo for the turul-taimah.
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Panayam.
Fried rice cakes. |
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Source:
Abdulla, Dr. Norma Abubakar. The Food and Culture of the Tausug.
p.90-91
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