

Calamansi juice Ĭalamansi juice, also known as "Filipino lemonade", is the Filipino version of lemonade, made from the juice of fresh-squeezed calamansi sweetened with sugar or honey and chilled. Like the dessert, the drink is characteristically light green in color from the pandan leaves, and the jellies used are usually dyed green. The drink version is the same, but is less thick and has more liquid. When used alone, buko pandan typically refers to a type of dessert made with strips of coconut, pandan leaves, and various jellies in coconut milk. Buko juice īuko pandan refers to a very common flavor combination of coconut and pandan leaves in Filipino cuisine. They also usually include jelly-like ingredients or pieces of fruit. The only common theme is that they are served cold with ice cubes or shaved ice. The recipes however can be combined at the discretion of the maker. The main types of samalamig are listed below. Types Buko pandan drink with pinipig Guinomis Sago at gulaman (foreground) and halo-halo The restaurant versions typically top the drinks with shaved ice. They are traditionally sold by street vendors during summer months, but are now also offered by restaurants. Thus they can come in a wide variety of flavors and types. Samalamig does not refer to a specific drink, but to a class of drinks that are served cold by street vendors. An alternate name is palamig which means "cooler" or "chiller".
BUKO PANDAN DRINK FULL
buko juice is "buko sa malamig" and sago't gulaman is "sago't gulaman sa malamig", but these full phrases are no longer in habitual use.

Thus, "sa malamig" could be taken as a qualifier for the various types of drinks stored in cold containers, i.e. " sa malamig", loosely "here for cold drinks".

"Sa malamig" might have come from the calls of ambulant vendors, telling people to come and get cold drinks, i.e. "Sa malamig" may thus loosely mean "for cold (drinks) at a cold place chilled". The name "samálamig" comes from sa, meaning "for to at", and malamíg, an adjective meaning "cold, chilly" in Tagalog. Samalamig may also include various chilled fruit juices (usually with chunks of fruit), chocolate, and coffee drinks, regardless if jellies are added, that are also typically sold by samalamig vendors. They are usually anglicized as pearl coolers or pearl and jelly coolers. Typical ingredients of the drinks include gulaman (agar), sago pearls, kaong, tapioca pearls, nata de coco, and coconut (including macapuno). They come in various flavors, and are commonly sold by street vendors as refreshments. Samalamig, also known as palamig, is a collective term for various Filipino sweet chilled beverages that usually include jelly-like ingredients. Various types of samalamig sold by a street vendor in Malabon
