It is a common delicacy in Tawi-Tawi, Sulu, Basilan, and the Zamboanga Peninsula.
It has also been introduced by Sama migrants to Sabah, Malaysia, where it is known as ketupat tehe-tehe or nasi tehe-tehe.
Oko-oko is prepared with a specific type of sea urchins called tehe'-tehe' (also transcribed as tehe-tehe).
The spines are first scraped off and the entrails removed through a small hole at the bottom.
The edible gonads are
retained.
Uncooked rice mixed with
spices and various ingredients are then poured into the hole.
The hole is plugged with
pandan or coconut leaves.
It is then boiled whole
until the rice is cooked.
Oko-oko is eaten by cracking
the shell and peeling it like a hard-boiled egg.
The compacted rice inside
with the salty sea urchin gonads are eaten directly while held, similar to
leaf-wrapped rice cakes.
Look it up on Wikipedia
Photo: Pixabay/GDJ
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