Hardinera is a festive and delicious addition to any holiday meal! This Lucban delicacy is made with a mixture of braised pork, vegetables, pineapple, and eggs and steamed to perfection for a hearty and tasty dish that's sure to be a crowd favorite.
Embutido has always been my Filipino meatloaf of choice for every get-together, but after trying hardinera for the first time last weekend, I will certainly be switching to this Lucban's specialty for our Christmas feast this year. And if you'd like to level up your menu easily, try this Marikina everlasting!
Hardinera vs Embutido
Although both are steamed and share a few similar ingredients, hardinera is a whole different beast from the classic embutido.
- While embudito uses ground meat and is steamed raw, Lucban's meatloaf is made of diced pork which is precooked Menudo-style in tomato sauce before steaming to set.
- The chopped pork mixture is packed and steamed in llanera molds instead of rolling into logs with aluminum foil.
- Instead of wrapping the meat mixture around the various fillings in embutido, the pork loaf is adorned with hard-boiled eggs, pineapples, carrots, and bell peppers for a festive look.
Ingredient notes
This steamed meat loaf has a unique yet nonetheless delicious myriad of flavors. A festive mix of diced pork, luncheon meat, ketchup, sweet pickles, bell peppers, cheese, raisins, and pineapple tidbits, it's the perfect balance of savory and sweet that will have your guests coming back for more!
I like to use pork shoulder/butt or kasim as it's meaty with a good layering of fat for juiciness and flavo. Diced luncheon meat is also added to extend servings, but you can also use ham, hot dogs, or bacon.
How to make Lucban Hardinera
Don't let the three step cooking deter you! This meatloaf is worth the work! Check out the brief overview below before heading to the recipe card to help make the process seamless.
Cooking the pork
Combine pork, sliced onions, crushed garlic, ketchup, and tomato paste in a large pot. Season with salt and add enough water to cover. Bring to a boil, skimming scum that floats on top. Lower heat, cover, and simmer until meat is fork tender but not falling apart.
Cooking the meat mixture
- Cut the meat into uniform sizes to ensure even cooking.
- Saute onions and garlic in a wide pan until softened. Add the remaining tomato ketchup and tomato paste. Simmer until the sauce is absorbed and the mixture is mostly dry. Too much liquid will keep the meatloaf from setting well.
- Add luncheon meat, pineapple, bell peppers, pickle relish, raisins, and cheese. Stir to evenly distribute.
- Remove from heat and transfer to a bowl. Let cool completely before adding the beaten eggs, lest they cook and curdle in the residual heat.
Steaming the pork loaf
- For easy removal of steamed pork loaves, grease the bottom and sides of the tin molds with softened butter. Line the bottom with a banana leaf and lightly brush with additional butter. Arrange the garnishes on top of the banana leaf. You can use boiled egg slices, pineapple slices, bell pepper strips, raisins, and carrot florets.
- Pour beaten eggs on the garnishes before packing in the pork mixture, and then pour the remaining beaten eggs over the whole mixture as well to help the loaf set and hold together.
- Cover each llanera tightly with aluminum foil to keep the condensation from dripping on the meat. Steam until the meat mixture is set and a thermometer inserted in the center reads 160 F.
- Let stand for about 8 to 10 minutes before inverting on a plate and slicing for the loaf to set and the juices to redistribute. Or refrigerate until completely cold before serving.
Quick tip
No banana leaves? You can use parchment paper to line the llaneras.
How to store and serve
- Lucban hardinera is traditionally served for fiestas, holidays, and other special occasions. It can be enjoyed hot or cold.
- Keep in the tin or transfer to a tight-fitting lid and refrigerate for up to 3 days or freeze for up to 2 months.
More pork recipes
Ingredients
- 2 pounds whole pork butt, cut into four parts
- 1 onion, peeled and sliced
- 6 cloves garlic, peeled and crushed
- 2 cups tomato ketchup
- 2 tablespoons tomato paste
- salt
- water
- 2 tablespoons canola oil
- 1 small onion, peeled and chopped
- 2 cloves garlic, peeled and minced
- 1 large red bell pepper, cored, seeded and chopped
- 1 cup luncheon meat, diced
- 1 cup pineapple tidbits
- 1 cup cheese, shredded
- ยผ cup sweet pickle relish
- 2 tablespoons raisins
- 1 teaspoon sugar
- butter, softened
- 4 eggs, well beaten
Garnish
- 4 pineapple slices, halved
- 2 hard-boiled eggs, peeled and cut into slices
- carrot florets
- red bell pepper strips
Instructions
- Rinse pork and drain well.
- In a deep pot, combine pork, sliced onions, crushed garlic, 1 cup of the ketchup, 1 tablespoon of the tomato paste, 1 teaspoon salt, and enough water to cover. Stir to distribute.
- Bring to a boil, skimming scum that floats on top. Lower heat, cover, and cook for about 1 to 1 ยฝ hours or until meat is fork-tender.
- Remove pork from the pot and allow to cool to touch. Cut into small cubes.
- In a wide pan over medium heat, heat oil. Add onions and garlic and cook until softened.
- Add the remaining 1 cup tomato ketchup and 1 tablespoon tomato paste. Stir and simmer for 1 minute or until heated through.
- Add pork, luncheon meat, bell peppers, sweet relish, cheese, pineapple tidbits, raisins, sugar, and salt to taste.
- Add about ยฝ cup water and continue to cook until the sauce is mostly absorbed.
- Transfer mixture to a large bowl and allow to cool completely.
- Brush the bottom and sides of three llaneras with softened butter. Line each with banana leaf cut in oval shape large enough to cover the bottom of the molds. and lightly brush with butter.
- Arrange boiled egg slices, pineapple slices, bell pepper strips, and carrot florets on top of the banana leaves.
- Divide and pour half of the beaten eggs into each llanera molds over the garnishings.
- Spoon pork mixture into the molds. Pack the mixture well and smooth top.
- Divide and pour the remaining half of the egg mixture over the pork mixture, spreading across to fully cover the top.
- Cover each llanera tightly with aluminum foil. Steam for about 30 to 40 minutes or until the meat mixture is set.
- Let stand for about 8 to 10 minutes and then invert on a serving platter. Peel the banana leaf and slice into serving portions. Or refrigerate for at least an hour or until completely cold.ย
- Serve hot or cold.
Notes
- Simmer until the sauce is absorbed and the mixture is mostly dry. Too much liquid will keep the meatloaf from setting well.
- Remove from heat and transfer to a bowl. Let cool completely before adding the beaten eggs, lest they cook and curdle in the residual heat.
- Let stand for about 8 to 10 minutes to allow the juices to redistribute, then invert to a serving platter. Or refrigerate until completely cold before serving.
- This recipe makes 3 llaneras at four servings each.
Video
Nutrition Information
โThis website provides approximate nutrition information for convenience and as a courtesy only. Nutrition data is gathered primarily from the USDA Food Composition Database, whenever available, or otherwise other online calculators.โ
graize says
hello. kung gagawin earlier mga ilang araw itatagal nya. or pwede ba syang ifrozen? bago i-steam?
Lalaine Manalo says
It should last in the refrigerator for up to 3 days. I wouldn't keep it longer than due to food safety. If you want to keep it longer, transfer into airtight containers and freeze.
Rosita Collantes says
I like this menu and I want to try to make it in looking it's so delicious I love it please can I share this in my messenger so I can follow the instruction
Christy says
I am concern tha plastic being used in cooking as it is toxic to our health. I will omit using plastic in any form in steaming or cooking since there's a tendency to melt.
Alyssa says
When we cook hardinera in Lucban we usually braise the pork chunks first in soy sauce and garlic "kinulob" style. Then we cut it into cubes and cook it in tomato sauce. Quite a tedious process but definitely worth it. That's why we only make it during special occasions.
Lalaine Manalo says
When you say, kinulob, do you mean covered and at low heat? I am excited to try your version and make this as authentically as possible! Thank you so much!
Joyce says
is Hardinera eaten hot or cold?
Lalaine Manalo says
It can be eaten hot or cold ๐
Julie says
Tried it but mine did not set. Is there anything i missed or did i not let it cool long ebough before serving?
Lalaine says
Hello Julie,
I am sorry you're having trouble with the recipe. One reason the meatloaf doesn't set is the meat mixture was not dry enough. It should be cooked until all the liquid is completely absorbed or at least drained well. And, yes, you need to cool it to give the loaf time to set.
Hope this helps!
Noemi says
Hi, wanna try this, but just one question. Will this work if instead of steaming it, you put it in the oven? Thanks!
Lalaine says
It will work in the oven but please set it up on a bain marie or water bath to simulate steaming.
Aldrin Alejandro C Arroyo says
Hi, true hardinera cooking calls for banana leaf as lining rather than plastic sheet. It's more fragrant, too.
Lalaine says
I agree, nothing beats the aroma of charred banana leaves but unfortunately, I don't always have ready access to banana leaves here in the U.S. so I make do with supplies/material available and plastic film works in a pinch ๐
Melbert says
Our town specialty... We always cook hardinera almost all occasion...Wedding Baptismal Fiestas
Lalaine Manalo says
Hi Melbert! Yep, one of our party faves.
DeeAnn says
Thabks, ms lalaine!
Lalaine says
You're welcome. I hope you like it ๐
Lirio Lontoc says
Want to try immediately, so yummy and deliciously look.
Lalaine says
I hope you do. It's so good and perfect for Christmas ๐
Arlene says
Hi! Do u recipe for lasagna?
Lalaine says
Yes, I do ๐ Here's the recipe https://www.kawalingpinoy.com/filipino-style-lasagna/
flor valiente says
Definitely im.going to make this.my father is from lucban and this is one of my favorite dish ialways ask my aunt to make this everytime I visit them
Over there in lucban
joyce says
Hi, Ms. Lalaine!
Is hardinera the same as 'mudin' recipe of Pampanga?
I really love mudin, but doesn't know how to cook it.
Thanks!
Leah says
Budin (not mudin) is bread pudding.
edelweiza says
First time to hear about Hardinera. I also love embotido and this one looks yummier with all those ingredients! ๐
Elinor Semira says
if there's hardinera, there's hardinero too. kidding aside, it looks so yummy. looks like morcon to me.
Lalaine says
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