, which uses
tamarind instead of
vinegar as a souring agent|alt=Tinumis from Nueva Ecija Other regional variants of
dinuguan include: • In Aklan, it is called
dinuguan sa batwan, using the
batwan fruit. • In Bulacan, it is called
serkele/sirkele, a specialty similar in ingredients to
dinuguan but without pig's blood and using beef internal organs; soupy and on the sour side; other reports cow blood is used. • In Marinduque, a local variant known as
kari-kari is cooked with the same ingredients but is stewed until almost dry before the pork blood is added. • In Bicol, it is called
tinutungang dinuguan, meaning, it contains coconut milk and chilies; it is called such because coconut milk is added, and charcoal embers are used to cook the milk until curdling point at which it forms creamy reduction or
latik. • In Capiz,
dinuguan na manok sa pinulipot nga abalong. • In Cebu,
dugo-dugo, which has itself many versions, with some adding cubes of solidified blood, just like in Pampanga's
tid-tad, and other versions omitting the pork liver from the dish while the innards are chopped so finely down to the millimetre, so that the end result is a pork blood stew without the recognizable ingredients. • In the
Ilocos Region, dinuguan is known as
dinardaraan in
Ilocano, It is thicker and drier than most versions, with an oily and lightly vinegary taste derived from
sukang Iloko (cane vinegar). It is usually cooked with
pork offal and sometimes mixed with crispy pork such as
bagnet called
crispy dinardaraan, a version from
San Nicolas. A chicken-based variation called
sapsapuriket uses native chicken and has a lighter, brothier consistency. While in
Ilocos Norte, it is called
mollo, a brownish and watery version of
dinuguan. • In Laguna,
dinuguang kalabaw,
dinuguan using the more flavorful "
carabeef". • In Leyte (Southern), it is mixed with banana blossoms and pig's blood. • In Manila,
dinuguan sa usbong ng sampalok, a Tagalog blood stew with young tamarind leaves. • In Masbate, it is called
sinanglay, where they add
tanglad (lemongrass). • In
Northern Mindanao, it is called
sampayna or
champayna and also uses lemongrass. • In Pampanga,
dinuguang puti, synonym for
tidtad babi which is not black or brown unlike the usual
dinuguan because the blood is torn into pieces by hand after it curdles. • In Pangasinan, it is called
baguisen; it uses
kamias as a souring agent; the offal is washed with detergent then boiled in guava leaves to get rid of the smell; in Barangay Inirangan, Bayambang, they include
upo slices in their
baguisen. • In Quezon Province, it is called
pirihil, a
dinuguan of chicken gizzard, heart and liver. • In Visayas, called
paklay, a Visayan blood stew of blood and intestine of goat, but a little bit drier. • In Zamboanga/Basilan or Cavite (
Chavacano), "Chavacano-style
dinuguan", which uses
tuba (sugar cane) vinegar and contains crushed oregano leaves. ==See also==