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Tubâ

Tubâ (Tagalog pronunciation: [tʊˈbaʔ]) is a Filipino alcoholic beverage created from the sap of various species of palm trees.[1] During the Spanish colonial period, tubâ was introduced to Guam, the Marianas, and Mexico via the Manila Galleons. It remains popular in Mexico, especially in the states of Colima, Jalisco, Michoacán, Nayarit, and Guerrero. Tubâ was also introduced to the Torres Strait Islands of Australia in the mid-19th century by Filipino immigrant workers in the pearling industry.[2][3][4]

Tubâ
TypePalm wine
Country of origin Philippines
Alcohol by volume 2%-4%[1]

History edit

 
A kawa still for the production of lambanóg from tubâ (c. 1912)
 
Bringing "tuba" (coconut-palm sap) to market in bamboo containers, Philippines, 1923

Tubâ has existed in the Philippines since pre-colonial times. It was widely consumed for recreation as well as having played an important role in the animist religious rituals presided by babaylan shamans. Heavy consumption of tubâ and other alcoholic beverages in the Philippines was reported by early Spanish colonizers. Social drinking (inuman or tagayan in Tagalog and Visayan languages) was and continues to be an important aspect of Filipino social interactions.[5][6][7]

A peculiar and universal drinking custom of the islands is the sharing of a single drinking container. During tagayan, one person (usually the owner of the beverage) becomes the tanggero who fills a cup with a serving of alcohol (a tagay). A person in the group then drinks the cup and passes it back to the tanggero for a refill. The tanggero fills the cup again and passes it to the next person, and so on. Another practice is to drink from the same container at the same time using drinking straws made from hollow reeds or bamboo. Tagayan was usually accompanied by a shared serving of food known as pulutan. The ritual and terminology of tagayan was recorded in the Bocabulario Tagalog manuscript (1630) by Fray Miguel Ruiz, and they remain largely unchanged today. Tagayan is also related to the ancient Filipino practice of sandugo (blood compact), as both reinforce camaraderie and social bonds among participants by drinking from the same vessel.[6][7][8]

Tubâ was first recorded in European records by Antonio Pigafetta of the Magellan expedition (c. 1521), who called it uraca and mistakenly assumed that it was distilled.[9]

"Cocoanuts are the fruit of the palmtree. Just as we have bread, wine, oil, and milk, so those people get everything from that tree. They get wine in the following manner. They bore a hole into the heart of the said palm at the top called palmito, from which distils a liquor which resembles a white must. That liquor is sweet but somewhat tart, and is gathered in canes of bamboo as thick as the leg and thicker. They fasten the bamboo to the tree at evening for the morning, and in the morning for the evening."

— Antonio Pigafetta, Il primo viaggio intorno al globo di Antonio Pigafetta e le sue regole sull'arte del navigare (1524-1525), [9]

Tubâ could be further distilled using a distinctive type of still into a palm liquor known as lambanóg (coconut) and laksoy (nipa). During the Spanish colonial period of the Philippines, lambanog and laksoy were inaccurately called vino de coco ("coconut wine") and vino de nipa ("nipa wine"), respectively, despite them being distilled liquor. From around 1569, lambanog (as vino de coco) was introduced via the Manila galleons to Nueva Galicia (present-day Colima, Jalisco, and Nayarit), Mexico by Filipino immigrants who established coconut planations. It quickly became highly popular in the region. It competed with the sales of imported spirits from Spain, leading Spanish colonial authorities and the Royal Audience in Spain to ban the production of vino de coco and issue an order for the destruction of coconut plantations. By the mid-1700s, vino de coco production in Mexico had ceased (though non-alcoholic variants of tubâ persisted). The prohibition of vino de coco and the introduced distillation technologies from the Philippines led to the development of mezcal and tequila by the indigenous peoples of Mexico.[10][5][11]

Regional variations edit

Bahal edit

 
Bahalina, a wine made from aged tubâ with bark extracts

Bahal is a type of tubâ that is distinctively orange to brown in color because it has added extracts (barok) from the dried bark (marka tungog or tangal) of certain mangrove species (Ceriops tagal, Rhizophora mucronata, or Vateria indica). It is fermented for around a day to a few weeks. It is an intermediate stage in the production of bahalina wines. It originates from the Visayan regions of Visayas and Mindanao.

Kinutil edit

Kinutil is tubâ mixed with raw egg yolks, tabliya chocolate, milk, and other ingredients. It is widespread in the Visayan regions of Visayas and Mindanao and is also known as kinutir, kutir, or dubado, among other names.[12][13][14]

Tuhak edit

Tuhak is a type of tubâ made from the sap of kaong palm (Arenga pinnata), locally known as kaong or cabonegro. It originates from the Caraga region of Mindanao. It is collected and fermented in the same way as tubâ. However, extracts from the bark of a tree known as lamud may sometimes be added to aid in fermentation and to prevent the souring of the sap. It is also known as hidikup or hidiup in Agusan del Norte and san in Agusan del Sur.[1][8]

Tunggang edit

 
Fresh (unfermented) tunggang from Northern Mindanao

Tunggang is a type of tubâ made by the Manobo, Mandaya, and Mamanwa people from fishtail palm (Caryota spp.) sap. It is not as popular as other varieties of tubâ because it has a relatively more unpleasant smell and taste.[8]

Outside of the Philippines edit

Mariana Islands edit

Tubâ production and coconut sap harvesting were introduced to Guam and the Mariana Islands (then part of the Spanish East Indies) by Filipino settlers. Their initial introduction is usually attributed to the Filipino assistants of the Spanish missionary Diego Luis de San Vitores in 1668. Tubâ quickly became a fixture of the culture in the islands, which previously had no native alcoholic drink. The Chamorro people developed two derivatives from tubâ: aguajente (also aguayente or agi, from Spanish aguardiente), a distilled liquor similar to Filipino lambanóg; and almibad, a sweet syrup made from boiled coconut sap used in making candies and rice cakes (potu). Tubâ itself was either consumed fresh (non-alcoholic) or fermented; with the former popular to women and children, and the latter popular to men.[15][16][17]

Soon after the acquisition of Guam by the United States from Spain in 1899, aguajente was banned by the American government. Anyone caught making it would get a prison sentence and a fine. The ban remained in place for the next 40 years, restricting tubâ only to the non-alcoholic and mildly alcoholic versions. In 1939, shortly before the outbreak of World War II, taxes were also levied on tubâ-producing coconut palms, further crippling the industry. Today, tubâ is rare in the islands and its production is in decline.[17]

Mexico edit

 
Tuba fresca from Colima, Mexico; a non-alcoholic drink made from coconut sap derived from Philippine tubâ

Tubâ, along with coconuts (which are not native to the Americas), was introduced to Mexico in the 16th to 17th centuries via the Manila Galleons to Acapulco. It remains popular in Western Mexico where it is known as tuba, particularly in the states of Colima, Jalisco, Michoacán, and Guerrero.[2][3][4] Mexican tuba is made in the same way as Filipino tubâ. The traditional sap collectors are known as tuberos (which also means "plumber" in both Mexico and the Philippines). They were also distilled into vino de coco (lambanog), which became so popular that in 1619, Captain Sebastian de Piñeda wrote to King Philip III of Spain complaining of the Filipino "Indio" settlers in Nueva España who were causing significant loss of profits to Iberian alcohol exporters due to tuba.[5][18][10] The distinctive Filipino-type stills used by tuba farmers were adopted by the indigenous peoples of Mexico for the distillation of other alcoholic drinks. The most notable of which is mezcal and sotol, the fermented juice of both drinks prior to distillation is still called tuba.[19]

"There are in Nueva España so many of those Indians who come from the Filipinas Islands who have engaged in making palm wine along the other seacoast, that of the South Sea, and which they make with stills, as in Filipinas, that it ill in time become a part reason for the natives of Nueva España, who now use the wine that comes from Castilla, to drink none except what the Filipinos make. For since the natives of Nueva España are a race inclined to drink and intoxication, and the wine made by the Filipinos is distilled and as strong as brandy, they crave it rather than the wine from España. . . . So great is the traffic in this [palm wine] at present on the coast at Navidad, among the Apusabalcos, and throughout Colima, that they load beasts of burden with this wine in the same way as in España. By postponing the speedy remedy that this demands, the same thing might also happen to the vineyards of Piru. It can be averted, provided all the Indian natives of the said Filipinas Islands are shipped and returned to them, that the palm groves and vessels with which that wine is made be burnt, the palm-trees felled, and severe penalties imposed on whomever remains or returns to make that wine."

— Sebastian de Piñeda (1619), [19]

Mexican tuba is also commonly sold as tuba fresca, a non-alcoholic version made from fresh coconut sap. Tuba fresca is traditionally sold by street vendors in large bottle gourds mixed with coconut milk, ice, and sugar. It is usually topped with walnuts and diced fruit.[20][21]

Torres Strait Islands edit

In the mid-19th century Filipino immigrant workers settled in the Torres Strait Islands in Australia to work in the pearling industry as divers and overseers. They settled in sizable communities in Horn Island, Thursday Island, and Hammond Island, numbering at around 500 by 1884. Despite Australian anti-miscegenation laws and the general racism of the Australian government at the time, many Filipinos intermarried with the native Torres Strait Islanders. They also transmitted various Filipino traditions and material culture to the natives, including stories, songs, recipes, various crop plants, and new technologies.[22][23][24]

One of these technologies were the methods for producing tubâ. The Islanders, who previously had no tradition of alcohol production or consumption, quickly adopted the tubâ and all its various uses. They consumed coconut sap fresh as a non-alcoholic beverage or as a dip for mangoes; they fermented it into tubâ proper which they also called tuba; they used it as yeast to make bread rise; and they distilled it into liquor which they referred to as "steamed tuba." Even though Australian government prohibitions existed from 1837 to the 1960s banning the sale and consumption of alcohol to Indigenous Australians, it failed to stop the popularity of tuba.[22][23]

After the introduction of even more restrictive race-based laws in 1901 and the collapse of the pearl and shell market, most Filipinos started leaving Australia and returning to the Philippines. By 1912, almost all of the Filipino population was gone, along with the pearling industry, leaving only the families who intermarried with the locals and their descendants. The tradition of tuba production, however, remained. During World War II, tuba was sold by the Islanders to American servicemen stationed in the Strait who were also familiar with tuba. Tuba is still an important part of Torres Strait Islander culture today.[22][23][24]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Sanchez, Priscilla C. (2008). Philippine Fermented Foods: Principles and Technology. UP Press. pp. 151–153. ISBN 9789715425544.
  2. ^ a b Astudillo-Melgar, Fernando; Ochoa-Leyva, Adrián; Utrilla, José; Huerta-Beristain, Gerardo (March 22, 2019). "Bacterial Diversity and Population Dynamics During the Fermentation of Palm Wine From Guerrero Mexico". Frontiers in Microbiology. 10: 531. doi:10.3389/fmicb.2019.00531. PMC 6440455. PMID 30967846.
  3. ^ a b Veneracion, Jaime (2008). "The Philippine-Mexico Connection". In Poddar, Prem; Patke, Rajeev S.; Jensen, Lars (eds.). Historical Companion to Postcolonial Literatures - Continental Europe and its Empires. Edinburgh University Press. p. 574. ISBN 9780748630271.
  4. ^ a b Mercene, Floro L. (2007). Manila Men in the New World: Filipino Migration to Mexico and the Americas from the Sixteenth Century. UP Press. p. 125. ISBN 9789715425292.
  5. ^ a b c Gibbs, H.D.; Holmes, W.C. (1912). "The Alcohol Industry of the Philippine Islands Part II: Distilled Liquors; their Consumption and Manufacture". The Philippine Journal of Science: Section A. 7: 19–46.
  6. ^ a b Lasco, Gideon. "Tagay: Why there's no Tagalog word for "cheers" and other notes on Filipino drinking culture". Health, Culture, and Society in the Philippines. Retrieved May 6, 2019.
  7. ^ a b Garcia, Lawrence (December 9, 2017). "Tagay: A Look at Philippine Drinking Culture". Humaling. Retrieved May 6, 2019.
  8. ^ a b c Garvan, John M. (1912). "Report on the drinks and drinking among the Mandaya, Manobo, and Mangguangan Tribes". The Philippine Journal of Science: Section A. 7: 106–114.
  9. ^ a b Nowell, C. E. (1962). "Antonio Pigafetta's account". Magellan's Voyage Around the World. Evanston: Northwestern University Press. hdl:2027/mdp.39015008001532. OCLC 347382.
  10. ^ a b Zizumbo-Villarreal, Daniel; Colunga-GarcíaMarín, Patricia (June 2008). "Early coconut distillation and the origins of mezcal and tequila spirits in west-central Mexico". Genetic Resources and Crop Evolution. 55 (4): 493–510. doi:10.1007/s10722-007-9255-0. S2CID 33594723.
  11. ^ Fernandez, Doreen G. (2019). Tikim: Essays on Philippine Food and Culture. BRILL. p. 17. ISBN 9789004414792.
  12. ^ "Do You Know What Kinutil Is?". Bite Sized. January 23, 2019. Retrieved May 5, 2019.
  13. ^ Damo, Ida. "Kinutil: The Filipino Mudslide Drink". ChoosePhilippines. Retrieved May 5, 2019.
  14. ^ "Comfort food ng mga Waray". Kapuso Mo, Jessica Soho. GMA Public Affairs. Retrieved May 5, 2019.
  15. ^ "Tuba: Guam's 'Water of Life' lives on". Stars and Stripes Guam. Retrieved May 6, 2019.
  16. ^ "Filipinos on Guam: Cultural contributions". Guampedia. October 2, 2009. Retrieved May 6, 2019.
  17. ^ a b "Tuba taxed, outlawed, now threatened by rhino beetle". Pacific Daily News. January 27, 2019. Retrieved May 6, 2019.
  18. ^ "Culture of Colima". Explorando Mexico. Retrieved May 5, 2019.
  19. ^ a b Bruman, Henry J. (July 1944). "The Asiatic Origin of the Huichol Still". Geographical Review. 34 (3): 418–427. doi:10.2307/209973. JSTOR 209973.
  20. ^ Esparza, Bill. "Beyond Aguas Frescas: Two Refreshing Mexican Coolers to Try This Summer". Lamag - Culture, Food, Fashion, News & Los Angeles. Retrieved May 5, 2019.
  21. ^ "Talking Tuba". Vallarta Today. Retrieved May 5, 2019.
  22. ^ a b c Brady, Maggie; McGrath, Vic (December 6, 2010). "Making Tuba in the Torres Strait Islands: The Cultural Diffusion and Geographic Mobility of an Alcoholic Drink". The Journal of Pacific History. 45 (3): 315–330. doi:10.1080/00223344.2010.530811. hdl:1885/53764. PMID 21280393. S2CID 205438671.
  23. ^ a b c Brady, Maggie; Book 3: Strong spirits from Southeast Asia (2008). First Taste: How Indigenous Australians Learnt About Grog. ACT: Alcohol Education and Rehabilitation Foundation. pp. 19–23. ISBN 9780980379129.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  24. ^ a b Shnukal, Anna (2011). "A double exile: Filipino settlers in the outer Torres Strait islands, 1870s–1940s". Aboriginal History. 35: 161–178. doi:10.22459/AH.35.2011.08. JSTOR 24046932.

tubâ, tagay, redirects, here, village, azerbaijan, tuğay, tagalog, pronunciation, tʊˈbaʔ, filipino, alcoholic, beverage, created, from, various, species, palm, trees, during, spanish, colonial, period, tubâ, introduced, guam, marianas, mexico, manila, galleons. Tagay redirects here For the village in Azerbaijan see Tugay Tuba Tagalog pronunciation tʊˈbaʔ is a Filipino alcoholic beverage created from the sap of various species of palm trees 1 During the Spanish colonial period tuba was introduced to Guam the Marianas and Mexico via the Manila Galleons It remains popular in Mexico especially in the states of Colima Jalisco Michoacan Nayarit and Guerrero Tuba was also introduced to the Torres Strait Islands of Australia in the mid 19th century by Filipino immigrant workers in the pearling industry 2 3 4 TubaTypePalm wineCountry of origin PhilippinesAlcohol by volume 2 4 1 Contents 1 History 2 Regional variations 2 1 Bahal 2 2 Kinutil 2 3 Tuhak 2 4 Tunggang 3 Outside of the Philippines 3 1 Mariana Islands 3 2 Mexico 3 3 Torres Strait Islands 4 See also 5 ReferencesHistory edit nbsp A kawa still for the production of lambanog from tuba c 1912 nbsp Bringing tuba coconut palm sap to market in bamboo containers Philippines 1923Tuba has existed in the Philippines since pre colonial times It was widely consumed for recreation as well as having played an important role in the animist religious rituals presided by babaylan shamans Heavy consumption of tuba and other alcoholic beverages in the Philippines was reported by early Spanish colonizers Social drinking inuman or tagayan in Tagalog and Visayan languages was and continues to be an important aspect of Filipino social interactions 5 6 7 A peculiar and universal drinking custom of the islands is the sharing of a single drinking container During tagayan one person usually the owner of the beverage becomes the tanggero who fills a cup with a serving of alcohol a tagay A person in the group then drinks the cup and passes it back to the tanggero for a refill The tanggero fills the cup again and passes it to the next person and so on Another practice is to drink from the same container at the same time using drinking straws made from hollow reeds or bamboo Tagayan was usually accompanied by a shared serving of food known as pulutan The ritual and terminology of tagayan was recorded in the Bocabulario Tagalog manuscript 1630 by Fray Miguel Ruiz and they remain largely unchanged today Tagayan is also related to the ancient Filipino practice of sandugo blood compact as both reinforce camaraderie and social bonds among participants by drinking from the same vessel 6 7 8 Tuba was first recorded in European records by Antonio Pigafetta of the Magellan expedition c 1521 who called it uraca and mistakenly assumed that it was distilled 9 Cocoanuts are the fruit of the palmtree Just as we have bread wine oil and milk so those people get everything from that tree They get wine in the following manner They bore a hole into the heart of the said palm at the top called palmito from which distils a liquor which resembles a white must That liquor is sweet but somewhat tart and is gathered in canes of bamboo as thick as the leg and thicker They fasten the bamboo to the tree at evening for the morning and in the morning for the evening Antonio Pigafetta Il primo viaggio intorno al globo di Antonio Pigafetta e le sue regole sull arte del navigare 1524 1525 9 Tuba could be further distilled using a distinctive type of still into a palm liquor known as lambanog coconut and laksoy nipa During the Spanish colonial period of the Philippines lambanog and laksoy were inaccurately called vino de coco coconut wine and vino de nipa nipa wine respectively despite them being distilled liquor From around 1569 lambanog as vino de coco was introduced via the Manila galleons to Nueva Galicia present day Colima Jalisco and Nayarit Mexico by Filipino immigrants who established coconut planations It quickly became highly popular in the region It competed with the sales of imported spirits from Spain leading Spanish colonial authorities and the Royal Audience in Spain to ban the production of vino de coco and issue an order for the destruction of coconut plantations By the mid 1700s vino de coco production in Mexico had ceased though non alcoholic variants of tuba persisted The prohibition of vino de coco and the introduced distillation technologies from the Philippines led to the development of mezcal and tequila by the indigenous peoples of Mexico 10 5 11 Regional variations editBahal edit Main article Bahalina nbsp Bahalina a wine made from aged tuba with bark extracts Bahal is a type of tuba that is distinctively orange to brown in color because it has added extracts barok from the dried bark marka tungog or tangal of certain mangrove species Ceriops tagal Rhizophora mucronata or Vateria indica It is fermented for around a day to a few weeks It is an intermediate stage in the production of bahalina wines It originates from the Visayan regions of Visayas and Mindanao Kinutil edit Main article Kinutil Kinutil is tuba mixed with raw egg yolks tabliya chocolate milk and other ingredients It is widespread in the Visayan regions of Visayas and Mindanao and is also known as kinutir kutir or dubado among other names 12 13 14 Tuhak edit Tuhak is a type of tuba made from the sap of kaong palm Arenga pinnata locally known as kaong or cabonegro It originates from the Caraga region of Mindanao It is collected and fermented in the same way as tuba However extracts from the bark of a tree known as lamud may sometimes be added to aid in fermentation and to prevent the souring of the sap It is also known as hidikup or hidiup in Agusan del Norte and san in Agusan del Sur 1 8 Tunggang edit nbsp Fresh unfermented tunggang from Northern MindanaoTunggang is a type of tuba made by the Manobo Mandaya and Mamanwa people from fishtail palm Caryota spp sap It is not as popular as other varieties of tuba because it has a relatively more unpleasant smell and taste 8 Outside of the Philippines editMariana Islands edit Tuba production and coconut sap harvesting were introduced to Guam and the Mariana Islands then part of the Spanish East Indies by Filipino settlers Their initial introduction is usually attributed to the Filipino assistants of the Spanish missionary Diego Luis de San Vitores in 1668 Tuba quickly became a fixture of the culture in the islands which previously had no native alcoholic drink The Chamorro people developed two derivatives from tuba aguajente also aguayente or agi from Spanish aguardiente a distilled liquor similar to Filipino lambanog and almibad a sweet syrup made from boiled coconut sap used in making candies and rice cakes potu Tuba itself was either consumed fresh non alcoholic or fermented with the former popular to women and children and the latter popular to men 15 16 17 Soon after the acquisition of Guam by the United States from Spain in 1899 aguajente was banned by the American government Anyone caught making it would get a prison sentence and a fine The ban remained in place for the next 40 years restricting tuba only to the non alcoholic and mildly alcoholic versions In 1939 shortly before the outbreak of World War II taxes were also levied on tuba producing coconut palms further crippling the industry Today tuba is rare in the islands and its production is in decline 17 Mexico edit See also Mezcal History nbsp Tuba fresca from Colima Mexico a non alcoholic drink made from coconut sap derived from Philippine tubaTuba along with coconuts which are not native to the Americas was introduced to Mexico in the 16th to 17th centuries via the Manila Galleons to Acapulco It remains popular in Western Mexico where it is known as tuba particularly in the states of Colima Jalisco Michoacan and Guerrero 2 3 4 Mexican tuba is made in the same way as Filipino tuba The traditional sap collectors are known as tuberos which also means plumber in both Mexico and the Philippines They were also distilled into vino de coco lambanog which became so popular that in 1619 Captain Sebastian de Pineda wrote to King Philip III of Spain complaining of the Filipino Indio settlers in Nueva Espana who were causing significant loss of profits to Iberian alcohol exporters due to tuba 5 18 10 The distinctive Filipino type stills used by tuba farmers were adopted by the indigenous peoples of Mexico for the distillation of other alcoholic drinks The most notable of which is mezcal and sotol the fermented juice of both drinks prior to distillation is still called tuba 19 There are in Nueva Espana so many of those Indians who come from the Filipinas Islands who have engaged in making palm wine along the other seacoast that of the South Sea and which they make with stills as in Filipinas that it ill in time become a part reason for the natives of Nueva Espana who now use the wine that comes from Castilla to drink none except what the Filipinos make For since the natives of Nueva Espana are a race inclined to drink and intoxication and the wine made by the Filipinos is distilled and as strong as brandy they crave it rather than the wine from Espana So great is the traffic in this palm wine at present on the coast at Navidad among the Apusabalcos and throughout Colima that they load beasts of burden with this wine in the same way as in Espana By postponing the speedy remedy that this demands the same thing might also happen to the vineyards of Piru It can be averted provided all the Indian natives of the said Filipinas Islands are shipped and returned to them that the palm groves and vessels with which that wine is made be burnt the palm trees felled and severe penalties imposed on whomever remains or returns to make that wine Sebastian de Pineda 1619 19 Mexican tuba is also commonly sold as tuba fresca a non alcoholic version made from fresh coconut sap Tuba fresca is traditionally sold by street vendors in large bottle gourds mixed with coconut milk ice and sugar It is usually topped with walnuts and diced fruit 20 21 Torres Strait Islands edit In the mid 19th century Filipino immigrant workers settled in the Torres Strait Islands in Australia to work in the pearling industry as divers and overseers They settled in sizable communities in Horn Island Thursday Island and Hammond Island numbering at around 500 by 1884 Despite Australian anti miscegenation laws and the general racism of the Australian government at the time many Filipinos intermarried with the native Torres Strait Islanders They also transmitted various Filipino traditions and material culture to the natives including stories songs recipes various crop plants and new technologies 22 23 24 One of these technologies were the methods for producing tuba The Islanders who previously had no tradition of alcohol production or consumption quickly adopted the tuba and all its various uses They consumed coconut sap fresh as a non alcoholic beverage or as a dip for mangoes they fermented it into tuba proper which they also called tuba they used it as yeast to make bread rise and they distilled it into liquor which they referred to as steamed tuba Even though Australian government prohibitions existed from 1837 to the 1960s banning the sale and consumption of alcohol to Indigenous Australians it failed to stop the popularity of tuba 22 23 After the introduction of even more restrictive race based laws in 1901 and the collapse of the pearl and shell market most Filipinos started leaving Australia and returning to the Philippines By 1912 almost all of the Filipino population was gone along with the pearling industry leaving only the families who intermarried with the locals and their descendants The tradition of tuba production however remained During World War II tuba was sold by the Islanders to American servicemen stationed in the Strait who were also familiar with tuba Tuba is still an important part of Torres Strait Islander culture today 22 23 24 See also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Tuba Mezcal Bahalina Lambanog Basi Tapuy Nipa palm vinegar Kaong palm vinegar Coconut sugarReferences edit a b c Sanchez Priscilla C 2008 Philippine Fermented Foods Principles and Technology UP Press pp 151 153 ISBN 9789715425544 a b Astudillo Melgar Fernando Ochoa Leyva Adrian Utrilla Jose Huerta Beristain Gerardo March 22 2019 Bacterial Diversity and Population Dynamics During the Fermentation of Palm Wine From Guerrero Mexico Frontiers in Microbiology 10 531 doi 10 3389 fmicb 2019 00531 PMC 6440455 PMID 30967846 a b Veneracion Jaime 2008 The Philippine Mexico Connection In Poddar Prem Patke Rajeev S Jensen Lars eds Historical Companion to Postcolonial Literatures Continental Europe and its Empires Edinburgh University Press p 574 ISBN 9780748630271 a b Mercene Floro L 2007 Manila Men in the New World Filipino Migration to Mexico and the Americas from the Sixteenth Century UP Press p 125 ISBN 9789715425292 a b c Gibbs H D Holmes W C 1912 The Alcohol Industry of the Philippine Islands Part II Distilled Liquors their Consumption and Manufacture The Philippine Journal of Science Section A 7 19 46 a b Lasco Gideon Tagay Why there s no Tagalog word for cheers and other notes on Filipino drinking culture Health Culture and Society in the Philippines Retrieved May 6 2019 a b Garcia Lawrence December 9 2017 Tagay A Look at Philippine Drinking Culture Humaling Retrieved May 6 2019 a b c Garvan John M 1912 Report on the drinks and drinking among the Mandaya Manobo and Mangguangan Tribes The Philippine Journal of Science Section A 7 106 114 a b Nowell C E 1962 Antonio Pigafetta s account Magellan s Voyage Around the World Evanston Northwestern University Press hdl 2027 mdp 39015008001532 OCLC 347382 a b Zizumbo Villarreal Daniel Colunga GarciaMarin Patricia June 2008 Early coconut distillation and the origins of mezcal and tequila spirits in west central Mexico Genetic Resources and Crop Evolution 55 4 493 510 doi 10 1007 s10722 007 9255 0 S2CID 33594723 Fernandez Doreen G 2019 Tikim Essays on Philippine Food and Culture BRILL p 17 ISBN 9789004414792 Do You Know What Kinutil Is Bite Sized January 23 2019 Retrieved May 5 2019 Damo Ida Kinutil The Filipino Mudslide Drink ChoosePhilippines Retrieved May 5 2019 Comfort food ng mga Waray Kapuso Mo Jessica Soho GMA Public Affairs Retrieved May 5 2019 Tuba Guam s Water of Life lives on Stars and Stripes Guam Retrieved May 6 2019 Filipinos on Guam Cultural contributions Guampedia October 2 2009 Retrieved May 6 2019 a b Tuba taxed outlawed now threatened by rhino beetle Pacific Daily News January 27 2019 Retrieved May 6 2019 Culture of Colima Explorando Mexico Retrieved May 5 2019 a b Bruman Henry J July 1944 The Asiatic Origin of the Huichol Still Geographical Review 34 3 418 427 doi 10 2307 209973 JSTOR 209973 Esparza Bill Beyond Aguas Frescas Two Refreshing Mexican Coolers to Try This Summer Lamag Culture Food Fashion News amp Los Angeles Retrieved May 5 2019 Talking Tuba Vallarta Today Retrieved May 5 2019 a b c Brady Maggie McGrath Vic December 6 2010 Making Tuba in the Torres Strait Islands The Cultural Diffusion and Geographic Mobility of an Alcoholic Drink The Journal of Pacific History 45 3 315 330 doi 10 1080 00223344 2010 530811 hdl 1885 53764 PMID 21280393 S2CID 205438671 a b c Brady Maggie Book 3 Strong spirits from Southeast Asia 2008 First Taste How Indigenous Australians Learnt About Grog ACT Alcohol Education and Rehabilitation Foundation pp 19 23 ISBN 9780980379129 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link a b Shnukal Anna 2011 A double exile Filipino settlers in the outer Torres Strait islands 1870s 1940s Aboriginal History 35 161 178 doi 10 22459 AH 35 2011 08 JSTOR 24046932 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tuba amp oldid 1176613446 Tunggang, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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