When the famous explorer Ferdinand Magellan and his men arrived in one of more than 7,100 islands in the Philippines, in March 17, 1521, the feast set before them by the natives included earthen jugs filled with tuba.
It has a stinging sweet and bittersweet taste.
Writers during the Middle Ages referred the coconut as the tree of life, which bear 12 manner of fruits, yieldeth her fruit every month. Every inch of this versatile plant, from the tip of its roots to the tip of its crown can be used.
Tuba is made through a process of extracting the sap of an unopened coconut bud. It has a stinging sweet and bittersweet taste. The tip of the bud is lopped and the pale juice allowed to trickle into bamboo containers. A sturdy tree yields about a gallon of liquid daily.
From coconut water, comes a syrup concentrate for tuba. Tuba is a sweet, fresh or mildly fermented sap taken from tapping the young expanded flowers of the coconut.
It is said that only tough men can withstand the effect of Tuba that affects mens senses and sanity. Filipinos consider Tuba as a type of hard drink.
Tuba is a coconut wine made in the Philippines.
It is considered a rural drink, because it has a short shelf life. It is not sold in stores or in restaurants.
It is made from coconut tree sap. One tree can produce two to four quarts / liters of Tuba a day.
The sap is drawn from a bud on the coconut tree's inflorescence (its floral branches, called the "sawak.") The floral branch is wrapped in a material such as rattan, then tapped on the edges so as to bruise its insides, and then bent and tied pointing downward, a little more each day so as not to break it. Up to three of these buds can be milked at one time from a tree without harming the tree.
When a floral branch is bending halfway down, the tip of it is sliced open. In two to three days, sap will start dripping from the tip, about one drop per second. The sap is collected in vessels called "sogong", which are covered otherwise to keep rain and bugs out.
The vessels are checked in the mornings, and the cut re-done everyday so that it doesn't seal itself. After two months, the supply of sap will dry up permanently.
A person who gathers the sap is called a "manananggot."
The sap is sweet. Powdered mangrove tree bark (called "tungog") is dropped in to colour it red and to tarten the taste, then the sap is filtered to get the bark out. If no bark is added, the Tuba is called "lina", and is sweeter.
The sap can be drunk fresh, or fermented. The fermentation happens naturally within a matter of days, and carbonates the drink.
The sooner the Tuba is drunk, the better, and it should be refrigerated to extend its shelf life. It starts to sour after two to three days. For about two weeks after that, it is called "bahal", and is strongly alcoholic.
Past that, it is useful just as a vinegar called "suka bisaya."
Tuba can also be used to make a stronger alcoholic drink called "lambanug." The Tuba is let ferment for five days, then distilled. Three-hundred gallons (1,135 litres) of sap are needed to make one gallon of lambanug.