I never cooked this dish when I was in the Phils because my Mom doesn’t like spicy foods. I usually order this whenever I’m at restaurants. 
Now that I live here in Sydney, I had to learn how to cook this because it’s rarely that I eat at Filipino Restaurants.
I only started cooking this dish early this year. I once brought this to a party and my friends loved it. This is a promised post to my friend Rachelle, who’s been waiting for me to share this–so here it is Rache, this recipe post is for you. 🙂
What you need:
1 large onion, chopped fine
200 grams green chillies (you can add more if you want your dish super spicy)
1/2 kilo Pork Rashers
2 teaspoons of Shrimp Paste or Bagoong
1. Remove the stems from the chillies.
2. Take the first half of the chillies, slice lengthwise and remove seeds and piths, then cut into small bits.
3. For the second half of the chillies, cut into small bits pieces with pith and seeds intact.
4. Wear gloves when slicing the chillies so that your fingers won’t burn.
5. If you don’t want your Bicol Express too spicy, remove ALL seeds and piths.
What you need to do:
1. Saute onion and garlic in oil.
2. Add coconut cream, water and pork. Let it simmer until pork is tender, about 10-15 minutes.
3. Throw in the green chillies and Baguio beans. Continue cooking for about 5 minutes and wait for sauce to thicken.
4. Add the Shrimp paste (Bagoong) and let it sit for a minute or two.
Some tips:
1. You can also use Coconut Milk. I use Coconut Cream because I want my Bicol Express creamier.
2. Adding Baguio Beans are optional. I just like my dishes with vegetables in it.
3. I only use green chillies for Bicol Express because it is milder compared to the red chillies. I tend to be careful with how much chillies I put into this dish because not everyone has the same tolerance for spicy food.

9 Comments
kay
Sarap ah!
CandyQ
I love this dish but I’ve never thought of preparing it. Your recipe looks so simple that I think I might have a go at it this week. Will have to substitute pork with beef though.
I tried your tuna pasta recipe by the way and it was a hit with my boys. Thanks!
Ibyang
@kay: try it!! 🙂
@CandyQ: hay naku, trust me to make any recipe simpler hehehe. for a working wife like me, i don’t like complicated recipes. let me know how it was for you.
thanks for letting me know of how the tuna recipe turn out for you…happy to know your boys loved it–buti they like tuna 🙂
RicAdeMus
That looks great–I like spicy food. I’ll see if my wife will try making it…if not, it can be a little project for me! =)
Leah
Naku, eto super favorite ko. I can’t cook but I really will never say NO to Bicol Express.
Mom Daughter Style
I miss Bicol express. I don’t mind spicy food too. Galing mo magluto, mukhang masarap
jeanny
swerte ko naman at natikman ko tong bicol express mo. Masarap sya. Hay nagutom tuloy ako.
Heart of Rachel
Wow, that’s a lot of work but I’m sure the outcome was worth the effort.
Eds
i love spicy food! uhmmm…mukhang ang sarap ng niluto mo ibyang. nagutom tuloy ako.