Padlamanggan

Summary

Padlamanggan (from padlas (crazy) and mangga (mango) from the Philippine language Waray-Waray[1]) is a usually colorless spirit from the Philippines which has an alcohol content that varies from 35 to 70% by volume. Padlamanggan is mostly drunk straight; sometimes the liquor is used as the basic ingredient for cocktails.

Production edit

Padlamanggan is manufactured in a few small villages on the island Leyte[2] which is part of the archipelago Visayas of the Philippines. The recipe for Padlamanggan can vary from village to village. The recipes entail local ingredients and are passed on orally. The so-called Manila Mango, which is it particularly juicy and sweet, is used as a basis for the mash of all Padlamanggan sorts.

History edit

In former times opium poppy was often added to the distillate, a practice which was forbidden by law in the course of Ferdinand Marcos[3] dictatorship. The population of the Visayas archipelago grants Padlamanggan a painkilling and healing effect.

References edit

  1. ^ Luangco, Gregorio C.; Kandabao: essays on Waray language, literature, and culture; 1982 Divine Word University Publications
  2. ^ Tantuico, Francisco Lino Sypaco; Leyte: The Historic Islands; 1964 Leyte Pub. Corp.
  3. ^ Celoza, Alberta F.; Ferdinand Marcos and the Philippines: The Political Economy of Authoritarianism; 1998 Praeger/Greenwood; ISBN 0-275-94137-X