
Penong’s Menu with Prices
Looking for the complete Penong’s Philippines menu with prices? You’ve come to the right place. We’ve compiled the full 2026 Penong’s menu with updated prices across all 11 categories — sourced directly from official Penong’s Philippines channels.
Penong’s is one of the Philippines’ most beloved Cebuano restaurant chains — built around the authentic barbecue, grilled seafood, and Visayan comfort food traditions of Cebu. The menu spans Inato Meals (combo plates), Abri-Gana (starters & appetizers), Pandungang (main courses), Kinaham (grilled meats), Sinugba (grilled seafood), Sinabaw (soups), Utan ni Penong’s (vegetables), Pabugnaw (drinks), and Sirado-Gana (desserts).
Prices range from ₱35 (Atchara) to ₱682 (Seafood Mandaragat). Scroll down for the complete updated menu.
Penong’s Visayan Menu Guide — Cebuano Terms Explained
Inato (Cebuano: “ours / our way”) — Penong’s proprietary combo meal format combining a main dish with rice and sides, the Cebuano equivalent of a value set meal. Abri-Gana (Cebuano: “appetizer / to whet the appetite”) — starters and small plates eaten before the main course. Pandungang (Cebuano: “main course / the main food”) — heavier main dishes. Kinaham (Cebuano: “grilled over fire”) — grilled meats on skewers or open flame. Sinugba (Cebuano: “grilled / charcoal-grilled”) — specifically charcoal-grilled seafood; sinugba is the Cebuano word that gave “inihaw” (Tagalog) its equivalent. Sinabaw (Cebuano/Filipino: “soup / broth dish”) — soupy preparations including Sinigang, Bulalo, and Tinola. Utan ni Penong’s (Cebuano: “Penong’s vegetables”) — vegetable and mixed dishes. Pabugnaw (Cebuano: “to cool down / cold drinks”) — cold beverages. Sirado-Gana (Cebuano: “after-meal / dessert course”) — desserts. Kinilaw — Visayan raw fish ceviche: fresh fish “cooked” by acid (coconut vinegar / sukang tuba) — the acid denatures the fish proteins producing a texture similar to heat-cooked fish without heat. Sinuglaw — a uniquely Visayan hybrid dish combining Sinugba (grilled pork) with Kinilaw (raw fish in vinegar) in the same plate. Bagaybay — tuna sperm sac, a Cebuano delicacy grilled on skewers. Halaan — clams in broth. Pinakbet — Ilocano vegetable stew of bitter melon, eggplant, squash, and string beans in bagoong (shrimp paste) sauce.
Penong’s Inato Meals Menu With Prices
| Menu Items | Price |
|---|---|
| Inato 3 | ₱ 237.00 |
| Inato 5 | ₱ 222.00 |
| Inato 2 | ₱ 187.00 |
| Inato 4 | ₱ 185.00 |
| Inato 1 | ₱ 182.00 |
Penong’s Abri-Gana Prices
| Menu Items | Price |
|---|---|
| Sinuglaw | ₱ 297.00 |
| Kinilaw | ₱ 254.00 |
| Calamares | ₱ 231.00 |
| Sizzling Sisig | ₱ 193.00 |
| Talong Ensalada | ₱ 187.00 |
| Pritong Isol | ₱ 139.00 |
| Adobong Kangkong | ₱ 109.00 |
| Okra Salad | ₱ 105.00 |
| Manggo’at Bagoong | ₱ 72.00 |
| Atchara | ₱ 39.00 |

Penong’s Pandungang Menu Prices
| Menu Items | Price |
|---|---|
| Crispy Pata | ₱ 682.00 |
| Battered Chicken Whole | ₱ 572.00 |
| Pork Canton Bilao | ₱ 534.00 |
| Sizzling Pusit | ₱ 363.00 |
| Sizzling Gambas | ₱ 352.00 |
| Binagoongang Baboy | ₱ 319.00 |
| Battered Chicken Half | ₱ 314.00 |
| Seafood Pancit Canton | ₱ 275.00 |
| Lechon Kawali | ₱ 292.00 |
| Sizzling Mixed Seafood | ₱ 264.00 |
| Seafood Mixed Seafood | ₱ 264.00 |
| Lumpia 10 pcs | ₱ 231.00 |
| Pork Pancit Canton | ₱ 180.00 |
| Lumpia Add-On | ₱ 53.00 |
Penong’s Kinaham Prices
| Menu Items | Price |
|---|---|
| Baby Back Ribs | ₱ 277.00 |
| Penong’s Liempo | ₱ 226.00 |
| Pork Chop | ₱ 193.00 |
| Chicken Barbecue | ₱ 149.00 |
| Longganisa | ₱ 91.00 |
| Chicken Liver | ₱ 50.00 |
| Pork Barbecue | ₱ 53.00 |
Penong’s Sinugba Menu Prices
| Menu Items | Price |
|---|---|
| Boneless Bangus | ₱ 215.00 |
| Sinugbang Pusit | ₱ 160.00 |
| Sinugbang Isda | ₱ 132.00 |
| Sinugbang Bagaybay | ₱ 88.00 |
| Tuna Panga | ₱ 75.00 |
| Hito | ₱ 72.00 |

Penong’s Sinabaw Prices
| Menu Items | Price |
|---|---|
| Seafood Mandaragat | ₱ 473.00 |
| Sinigang na Hipon | ₱ 297.00 |
| Sinigang na Lapu-Lapu | ₱ 290.00 |
| Bulalo | ₱ 282.00 |
| Tinolang Lapu-Lapu | ₱ 270.00 |
| Sinigang na Baboy | ₱ 224.00 |
| Sinigang na Bangus | ₱ 220.00 |
| Halaan | ₱ 220.00 |
Penong’s Utan ni Penong’s Menu Prices
| Menu Items | Price |
|---|---|
| Seafood Pinakbet | ₱ 259.00 |
| Penong’s Express | ₱ 242.00 |
| Pork Pinakbet | ₱ 229.00 |
| Seafood Chopsuey | ₱ 218.00 |
| Pork Chopsuey | ₱ 185.00 |
See Also: Mad Mark’s Menu
Penong’s Pabugnaw Prices
| Menu Items | 12oz | 16oz | Pitcher |
|---|---|---|---|
| Softdrinks | ₱ 50.00 | ₱ 61.00 | ₱ 138.00 |
| Iced Tea | ₱ 48.00 | ₱ 59.00 | ₱ 138.00 |
| Cucumber Lemonade | ₱ 48.00 | ₱ 59.00 | ₱ 138.00 |
| Calamansi | ₱ 48.00 | ₱ 59.00 | — |
Penong’s Sirado-Gana Prices
| Menu Items | Price |
|---|---|
| Ice Cream Shakes | ₱ 108.00 |
| Fresh Fruits with Cream | ₱ 94.00 |
| Halo-Halo | ₱ 94.00 |
| Fruit Shakes | ₱ 88.00 |
⭐ Our Favorite Items at Penong’s Menu
Is Penong’s Philippines Halal?
No — Penong’s Philippines is not Halal Certified. Pork is central to the menu — Penong’s Liempo, Lechon Kawali, Crispy Pata, Baby Back Ribs, Binagoongang Baboy, Sinigang na Baboy, Pork Barbecue, and pork-based Pancit Canton are featured throughout all sections. Muslim diners are advised accordingly.
About Penong’s Philippines
Penong’s is one of the Philippines’ most beloved Cebuano restaurant chains — built around the authentic barbecue, grilled seafood, and comfort food traditions of Cebu and the Visayas. The brand name “Penong’s” is a familiar diminutive of the Filipino name Alfonso or Eufronio — the kind of homey, personal name that signals a family restaurant rather than a corporate chain. The Visayan category names throughout the menu (Inato, Abri-Gana, Pandungang, Kinaham, Sinugba, Sinabaw, Pabugnaw, Sirado-Gana) are a deliberate linguistic choice — Penong’s presents its menu in Cebuano rather than Tagalog or English to signal regional identity and cultural authenticity.
The Kinaham (grilled) and Sinugba (charcoal-grilled seafood) sections are the heart of the brand. Penong’s built its reputation on affordable, well-marinated charcoal barbecue — particularly the Pork Barbecue (₱53 per stick), Chicken Barbecue (₱149), and Penong’s Liempo (₱226) — all marinated in the Cebuano style and cooked over live charcoal rather than gas, producing the authentic smoky flavor that distinguishes Cebuano barbecue from its Tagalog equivalents.
The presence of Sinuglaw (₱297) and Kinilaw (₱254) on the Abri-Gana section, and Bagaybay (₱88) on the Sinugba section, signals that Penong’s is not a simplified tourist-friendly Filipino restaurant but one that serves the full range of Visayan food culture — including the more adventurous regional specialties that most Metro Manila restaurants would not include on their menus.
Official Sources
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