Fulfill Your 2025 Goals With The Watsons Goal Getters

Ready to make 2025 your best year yet? Join the Watsons Goal Getters campaign and start your journey to a healthier, happier life!

TXT’s Concert In 4DX Brings MOAs To The Edge Of Their Seats—Quite Literally

Experience music like never before in “Tomorrow X Together: Hyperfocus,” the immersive 4DX concert film featuring admired hits, available at Ayala Malls Cinemas from January 15-21.

‘iNDIEGENIUS’ Project Champions Cultural Films For The Second Time Around

With its second edition, the iNDIEGENIUS Project Lab at iACADEMY provides promising filmmakers with essential tools and support to explore Indigenous storytelling.

Weaving the Past into the Future: Cebu Pacific Promotes Philippine Textile Arts

Cebu Pacific takes a step towards preserving Philippine cultural heritage through its new initiative promoting local textile arts.

Leyte Town Seeks Longer Shelf Life For Local Delicacy

Leyte is encouraging "suman" makers to innovate and prolong their production to raise earnings and expand the product's market nationwide and abroad.

Leyte Town Seeks Longer Shelf Life For Local Delicacy

21
21

How do you feel about this story?

Like
Love
Haha
Wow
Sad
Angry

The local government unit is encouraging producers here of suman (sticky rice), a native delicacy, to innovate and prolong its shelf life to raise their earnings and expand the product’s market nationwide and abroad.

“By improving the shelf life of this highly perishable product though improved processing and packaging, it will become more competitive and sustainable,” said Palo Mayor Remedios Petilla in an interview on Tuesday.

Suman is a traditional Filipino food made of glutinous rice, sugar, and coconut milk as its main ingredients and wrapped in banana or coconut leaves before being cooked by steaming.

The delicacy spoils in two days if stored at room temperature and lasts for a week if refrigerated.

Petilla asked the Department of Science and Technology (DOST), Department of Trade and Industry, and Department of Agriculture, among others, to help realize this plan.

Responding to the local government’s proposal, DOST Leyte provincial director John Glenn Ocaña informed the mayor of the possible adoption of retort technology developed and designed by the agency to extend the shelf life of the native delicacy.

Retorting is one of the major techniques used for the thermal processing of food products packed either in semi-rigid flexible laminates or in metal or alloy cans, according to a food processing website.

Ocaña said a technical team of experts from DOST’s Industrial Technology Development Institute is currently in Leyte to conduct thermal distribution and penetration tests for moron, the most famous delicacy in Leyte, which is a mix of sticky rice and cocoa wrapped in banana leaves.

The technology aims to extend the shelf life of moron from six months to a year without the need for refrigeration, allowing the marketing and exportation of the product to other parts of the country and overseas. (PNA)