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Burmese cuisine

Burmese cuisine (Burmese: မြန်မာ့အစားအစာ) encompasses the diverse regional culinary traditions of Myanmar, which have developed through longstanding agricultural practices, centuries of sociopolitical and economic change, and cross-cultural contact and trade with neighboring countries at the confluence of South Asia, Southeast Asia, and East Asia, including the modern-day nations of India, China, and Thailand.[1]

Laphet, served in a traditional lacquer tray called laphet ok.

Burmese cuisine is typified by a wide-ranging array of dishes, including traditional Burmese curries, Burmese salads, and soups that are traditionally eaten with white rice.[2] Burmese cuisine also features noodles in many forms, as fried or dry noodles, noodle soups, or as noodle salads, as well as Indian breads. Street food culture has also nurtured the profuse variety of traditional Burmese fritters and traditional snacks called mont.

The contrasting flavor profile of Burmese cuisine is broadly captured in the phrase chin ngan sat (ချဉ်ငန်စပ်), which literally means "sour, salty, and spicy."[3] A popular Burmese rhyme — "of all the fruit, the mango's the best; of all the meat, the pork's the best; and of all the leaves, lahpet's the best" — sums up the traditional favourites.[Note 1]

History

 
A traditional Burmese painting depicts the Royal Ploughing Ceremony, during which the monarch ceremonially ploughs a rice field outside the royal palace, to mark the traditional start of the rice-growing season.

Rice is the principal staple in Burmese cuisine, reflecting several millennia of rice cultivation, which first emerged in the country's Chindwin, Ayeyarwady, and Thanlwin river valleys between 11,000 and 5000 BCE.[4] By 3000 BCE, irrigated rice cultivation flourished, paralleled by the domestication of cattle and pigs by inhabitants.[4] In addition to rice, tea originated in the borderlands separating Myanmar from China, precipitating a longstanding tradition of tea consumption and the development of pickled tea known as laphet, which continues to play a pivotal role in Burmese ritual culture.[5][6] This longstanding history is reflected in the Burmese language, which is among the few world languages whose word for "tea" is not etymologically traced back to the Chinese word for "tea" (see etymology of tea).[7]

Agrarian settlements were settled by ancestors of Myanmar's modern-day ethnolinguistic groups. From these settlements emerged a succession of Burmese, Mon, Shan, Rakhine-speaking kingdoms and tributary states that now make up contemporary Myanmar. Paddy rice cultivation remains synonymous with the predominantly Buddhist Bamar, Mon, Shan, and Rakhine peoples who inhabit the country's fertile lowlands and plateaus.[8]

Burmese cuisine has been significantly enriched by contact and trade with neighboring kingdoms and countries well into modern times. The Columbian exchange in the 15th and 16th centuries introduced key ingredients into the Burmese culinary repertoire, including tomatoes, chili peppers, peanuts, and potatoes.[9] A series of Burmese–Siamese wars between the 16th to 19th centuries resulted in the emergence of Thai-inspired delicacies, including khanon dok, shwe yin aye, mont let hsaung, and Yodaya mont di.[10]

 
Buddhist monks in Mandalay receive food alms from a htamanè hawker during their daily alms round (ဆွမ်းလောင်းလှည့်).

While record-keeping of pre-colonial culinary traditions is scant, food was and remains deeply intertwined with religious life, especially among Buddhist communities, exemplified in the giving of food alms (dāna), and communal feasts called satuditha and ahlu pwe (အလှူပွဲ). One of the few remaining pre-colonial cookbooks is the Sadawhset Kyan (စားတော်ဆက်ကျမ်း, lit.'Treatise on Royal Foods'), written on a palm leaf manuscript in 1866 during the Konbaung dynasty.[11] By the Konbaung dynasty (16th to 19th centuries), elaborate preparations of food played a central role in key court ceremonies (e.g., naming ceremonies, wedding ceremonies, etc.), including as ritual offerings to Hindu and indigenous deities, and as celebratory meals for attendees.[12]

British rule in Burma between the 19th and 20th centuries led to the establishment of Burmese Indian and Sino-Burmese communities that introduced novel cooking techniques, ingredients, food vocabulary, and fusion dishes that are now considered integral parts of Burmese cuisine.[13] These range from Indian breads such as naan and paratha to Chinese stir frying techniques and ingredients like tofu and soy sauce.

Etiquette and customs

Dining

 
A traditional Burmese meal includes a bowl of soup, rice, several meat curries, and ngapi yay (a dip or dipping sauce) with tozaya (vegetables for dipping).

Traditionally, the Burmese eat meals from plates on a low table or daunglan, while sitting on a bamboo mat.[14] Dishes are simultaneously served and shared.[14] A traditional meal includes steamed white rice as the main dish accompanied by Burmese curries, a light soup or consommé, and other side dishes, including fried vegetables, Burmese fritters, and ngapi yay gyo (ငါးပိရည်ကျို), a plate of fresh and blanched vegetables served with pickled fish dip. The meal is then finished with a piece of palm sugar or laphet (fermented tea leaves).[15]

Out of respect, the eldest diners are always served first before the rest join in; even when the elders are absent, the first morsel of rice from the pot is scooped and put aside as an act of respect to one's parents, a custom known as u cha (ဦးချ, lit.'first serve').[16]

The Burmese traditionally eat with their right hand, forming the rice into a small ball with only the fingertips and mixing this with various morsels before popping it into their mouths.[16] Chopsticks and Chinese-style spoons are used for noodle dishes, although noodle salads are more likely to be eaten with just a spoon. Western-style utensils, especially forks and knives, have gained currency in recent years.

Religious practices

The country's diverse religious makeup influences its cuisine, as Buddhists and Hindus traditionally avoid beef and Muslims pork. Beef is considered taboo by devout Buddhists and farmers because the cow is highly regarded as a beast of burden.[17] Vegetarianism is commonly practiced by Buddhists during the three-month Vassa (ဝါတွင်း) between July and October, as well as during Uposatha days, reflected in the Burmese word for "vegetarian," thet that lut (သက်သတ်လွတ်, lit.'free of killing'). During this time, devout Buddhists observe eight or more precepts, including fasting rules that restrict food intake to two daily meals (i.e., breakfast and lunch) taken before noon.

Beef taboo

The beef taboo is fairly widespread in Myanmar, particularly in the Buddhist community. In Myanmar, beef is typically obtained from cattle that are slaughtered at the end of their working lives (16 years of age) or from sick animals.[18] Cattle is rarely raised for meat; 58% of cattle in the country is used for draught animal power.[18] Few people eat beef, and there is a general dislike of beef (especially among the Bamar and Burmese Chinese),[19][20] although it is more commonly eaten in regional cuisines, particularly those of ethnic minorities like the Kachin.[21] Buddhists, when giving up meat during the Buddhist (Vassa) or Uposatha days, will forego beef first.[22] Butchers tend to be Muslim because of the Buddhist doctrine of ahimsa (no harm).[23]

During the country's last dynasty, the Konbaung dynasty, habitual consumption of beef was punishable by public flogging.[24] In 1885, Ledi Sayadaw, a prominent Buddhist monk wrote the Nwa-myitta-sa (နွားမေတ္တာစာ), a poetic prose letter which argued that Burmese Buddhists should not kill cattle and eat beef, because Burmese farmers depended on them as beasts of burden to maintain their livelihoods, that the marketing of beef for human consumption threatened the extinction of buffalo and cattle, and that the practice was ecologically unsound.[25] He subsequently led successful beef boycotts during the colonial era, and influenced a generation of Burmese nationalists in adopting this stance.[25]

On 29 August 1961, the Burmese Parliament passed the State Religion Promotion Act of 1961, which explicitly banned the slaughtering of cattle nationwide (beef became known as todo tha (တိုးတိုးသား); lit.'hush hush meat').[26] Religious groups, such as Muslims, were required to apply for exemption licences to slaughter cattle on religious holidays. This ban was repealed a year later, after Ne Win led a coup d'état and declared martial law in the country.

Food theories

In traditional Burmese medicine, foods are divided into two classes: heating (အပူစာ, apu za) or cooling (အအေးစာ, a-aye za), based on their effects on one's body system, similar to the Chinese classification of food.[16] Examples of heating foods include chicken, bitter melon, durian, mango, chocolate, and ice cream. Examples of cooling foods include pork, eggplant, dairy products, cucumbers, and radish.

The Burmese also hold several taboos and superstitions regarding consumption during various occasions in one's life, especially pregnancy. For instance, pregnant women are not supposed to eat chili, due to the belief that it causes children to have sparse scalp hairs.[16]

Cooking techniques

 
Beans and pulses are commonly used in Burmese cuisine.

Burmese dishes are not cooked with precise recipes. The use and portion of ingredients used may vary, but the precision of timing is of utmost importance.[16][11] Burmese dishes may be stewed, boiled, fried, roasted, steamed, baked or grilled, or any combination of the said techniques.[11] Burmese curries use only a handful of spices (in comparison to Indian ones) and use more fresh garlic and ginger.[11]

Regional and variant cuisines

 
Htamin jin, 'fermented' rice kneaded with fish and/or potato with twice-fried Shan tofu, is a popular local dish at Inle Lake.

Broadly speaking, Burmese cuisine is divided between the culinary traditions of Upper Myanmar, which is inland and landlocked; and Lower Myanmar; which is surrounded by numerous rivers, river deltas, and the Andaman Sea.[27] Variations between regional cuisines are largely driven by the availability of fresh ingredients. Myanmar's long coastline has provided an abundant source of fresh seafood, which is particularly associated with Rakhine cuisine.[28] Southern Myanmar, particularly the area around Mawlamyaing, is known for its cuisine, as the Burmese proverb goes: "Mandalay for eloquence, Yangon for boasting, Mawlamyaing for food."[29][Note 2]

Cuisine in Lower Myanmar, including Yangon and Mawlamyaing, makes extensive use of fish and seafood-based products like fish sauce and ngapi (fermented seafood).[27] The cuisine in Upper Myanmar, including the Bamar heartland (Mandalay, Magway, and Sagaing Regions), Shan State, and Kachin States, tends to use more meat, poultry, pulses and beans.[27] The level of spices and use of fresh herbs varies depending on the region; Kachin and Shan curries will often use more fresh herbs.[2]

Fusion Chettiar (ချစ်တီးကုလား) cuisine, originating from Southern Indian cuisine, is also popular in cities.

Dishes and ingredients

Because a standardised system of romanisation for spoken Burmese does not exist, pronunciations of the following dishes in modern standard Burmese approximated using IPA are provided (see IPA/Burmese for details).

Preserved foods

 
A plate of ngapi yay gyo is surrounded by an assortment of traditional Burmese side dishes.

Myanmar is one of very few countries where tea is not only drunk but eaten as lahpet, pickled tea served with various accompaniments.[30][31] The practice of eating tea dates in modern-day Myanmar back to prehistoric antiquity, reflecting the legacy of indigenous tribes who pickled and fermented tea leaves inside bamboo tubes, bamboo baskets, plantain leaves and pots.[7] Tea leaves are traditionally cultivated by the Palaung people.[7] Pickled tea leaves continue to play an important role in Burmese culture today.[7]Ngapi (ငါးပိ), a fermented paste made from salted fish or shrimp, is considered the cornerstone of any Burmese traditional meal. It is used to season many soups, salads, curries and dishes, and condiments, imparting a rich umami flavor.[2] The ngapi of Rakhine State contains no or little salt, and uses marine fish. Meanwhile, ngapi made with freshwater fish is common in Ayeyarwady and Tanintharyi regions. Ngapi yay (ငါးပိရည်) is an essential part of Karen and Bamar cuisine, in which a sauce dip of ngapi cooked in various vegetables and spices is served with blanched and fresh vegetables, similar to Thai nam phrik, Indonesian lalab, and Malay ulam.

 
Dried fermented bean cakes called pè bok are grilled or fried in Shan cooking.

Shan cuisine traditionally uses fermented beans called pè ngapi (ပဲငါးပိ; lit.'bean ngapi'), in lieu of ngapi, to impart umami.[2] Dried bean ngapi chips (ပဲပုပ်; lit.'spoiled beans') are used as condiments for various Shan dishes.[32]

Pon ye gyi (ပုံးရည်ကြီး), a thick salty black paste made from fermented beans, is popular in the Bamar heartland. It is used in cooking, especially with pork, and as a salad with peanut oil, chopped onions and red chili. Bagan is an important pon ye gyi producer.[33]

Burmese cuisine also features a wide variety of pickled vegetables and fruits that are preserved in oil and spices, or in brine and rice wine.[3] The former, called thanat (သနပ်), are similar to South Asian pickles, including mango pickle. The latter are called chinbat (ချဉ်ဖတ်), and include pickles like mohnyin gyin.

Rice

 
Buddhist monks cooking rice at the Mahagandhayon Monastery in Amarapura.

The most common staple in Myanmar is steamed rice, called htamin (ထမင်း). Fragrant, aromatic varieties of white rice, including paw hsan hmwe (ပေါ်ဆန်းမွှေး), are popular. Lower-amylose varieties of glutinous rice, which are called kauk hnyin (ကောက်ညှင်း), also feature in Burmese cuisine, including a purple variety called ngacheik (ငချိပ်). Consumers in the northern highlands (e.g., Shan State) prefer stickier, lower-amylose varieties like kauk hnyin and kauk sei, while consumers in lower delta regions preferring higher-amylose varieties like kauk chaw and kauk kyan.[34] Lower-amylose varieties of rice are commonly used in traditional Burmese snacks called mont.[34] While rice is traditionally eaten plain, flavored versions like buttered rice and coconut rice are commonplace festive staples.[35]

 
Hsi htamin, glutinous rice seasoned with oil and turmeric, is a popular breakfast food.
  • Htamin gyaw (ထမင်းကြော် [tʰəmɪ́ɴ dʒɔ̀]) – fried rice with boiled peas, sometimes with meat, sausage, and eggs.[36]
  • San byok (ဆန်ပြုတ် [sʰàɴbjoʊʔ]) – rice congee with fish, chicken or duck often fed to invalids.
  • Danbauk (ဒံပေါက် [dàɴbaʊʔ], from Persian dum pukht) – Burmese-style biryani with either chicken or mutton served with mango pickle, a fresh salad of sliced onions, julienned cabbage, sliced cucumbers, fermented limes and lemons, fried dried chilies, and soup[37][38]
  • Htamin jin (ထမင်းချဉ်[tʰəmíɴ dʒɪ̀ɴ]) – a rice, tomato and potato or fish salad kneaded into round balls dressed and garnished with crisp fried onion in oil, tamarind sauce, coriander and spring onions often with garlic, Chinese chive roots, fried whole dried chili, grilled dried fermented bean cakes (pé bok) and fried dried tofu (tohu gyauk kyaw) on the side[39]
  • Thingyan rice (သင်္ကြန်ထမင်း [ðədʒàɴ tʰəmɪ́ɴ]) – fully boiled rice in candle-smelt water served with pickled marian plums[40]

Noodles

 
Rice noodles sun-drying in Hsipaw.

Burmese cuisine uses a wide variety of noodles, which are prepared in soups, salads, or other dry noodle dishes and typically eaten outside of lunch, or as a snack.[2] Fresh, thin rice noodles called mont bat (မုန့်ဖတ်) or mont di (မုန့်တီ), are similar to Thai khanom chin, and feature in Myanmar's national dish, mohinga. Burmese cuisine also has a category of rice noodles of varying sizes and shapes called nan, including nangyi (နန်းကြီး), thick udon-like noodles; nanlat (နန်းလတ်), medium-sized rice noodles; nanthe (နန်းသေး), thinner rice noodles; and nanbya (နန်းပြား), flat rice noodles.[41] Cellophane noodles, called kyazan (ကြာဆံ, lit.'lotus thread') and wheat-based noodles called khauk swe (ခေါက်ဆွဲ),[41] are often used in salads, soups, and stir-fries.[2]

 
Shan khao swè and tohpu jaw, with monnyin gyin on the side

Dry or fried noodle dishes include:

  • Kat kyi kaik (ကတ်ကြေးကိုက် [kaʔtɕígaɪʔ], lit.'bitten with scissors') – a southern coastal dish (from the Dawei area) of flat rice noodles with a variety of seafood, land meats, raw bean sprouts, beans and fried eggs, comparable to pad thai[42]
  • Meeshay (မြီးရှေ [mjíʃè]) – rice noodles with pork or chicken, bean sprouts, rice flour gel, rice flour fritters, dressed with soy sauce, salted soybean, rice vinegar, fried peanut oil, chilli oil, and garnished with crisp fried onions, crushed garlic, coriander, and pickled white radish/mustard greens
  • Mont di – an extremely popular and economical fast food dish where rice vermicelli are either eaten with some condiments and soup prepared from ngapi, or as a salad with powdered fish and some condiments.
  • Panthay khao swè (ပန်းသေးခေါက်ဆွဲ [páɴðé kʰaʊʔ sʰwɛ́]) – halal egg noodles with a spiced chicken curry. The dish is associated with Panthay community, a group of Burmese Chinese Muslims.[43]
  • Sigyet khauk swè (ဆီချက်ခေါက်ဆွဲ [sʰìdʑɛʔ kʰaʊʔ sʰwɛ́]) – wheat noodles with duck or pork, fried garlic oil, soy sauce and chopped spring onions. The dish originated from with the Sino-Burmese community[44]
 
Mandalay meeshay, served with a thin hingyo broth.

Noodle soups include:

Salads

 
Samosa salad in Mandalay

Burmese salads (အသုပ်; transliterated athoke or athouk) are a diverse category of indigenous salads in Burmese cuisine. Burmese salads are made of cooked and raw ingredients that are mixed by hand to combine and balance a wide-ranging array of flavors and textures.[50] Burmese salads are eaten as standalone snacks, as side dishes paired with Burmese curries, and as entrees.[51]

 
Thayet chin thoke – fermented green mango salad with onions, green chilli, roasted peanuts, sesame and peanut oil
  • Lahpet thoke (လက်ဖက်သုပ် [ləpʰɛʔ ðoʊʔ]) – a salad of pickled tea leaves with fried peas, peanuts and garlic, toasted sesame, fresh garlic, tomato, green chili, crushed dried shrimps, preserved ginger and dressed with peanut oil, fish sauce and lime[3]
  • Gyin thoke (ချင်းသုပ်[dʒɪ́ɰ̃ ðoʊʔ]) – a salad of pickled ginger with sesame seeds[3]
  • Khauk swè thoke (ခေါက်ဆွဲသုပ် [kʰaʊʔsʰwɛ́ ðoʊʔ]) – wheat noodle salad with dried shrimps, shredded cabbage and carrots, dressed with fried peanut oil, fish sauce and lime
  • Let thoke son (လက်သုပ်စုံ [lɛʔ θoʊʔzòʊɴ]) – similar to htamin thoke with shredded green papaya, shredded carrot, ogonori sea moss and often wheat noodles
  • Nan gyi thoke (နန်းကြီးသုပ် [náɰ̃dʒí ðoʊʔ]) or Mandalay mont di, thick rice noodle salad with chickpea flour, chicken, fish cake, onions, coriander, spring onions, crushed dried chilli, dressed with fried crispy onion oil, fish sauce and lime[52]
  • Samusa thoke (စမူဆာသုပ် [səmùsʰà ðoʊʔ]) – samosa salad with onions, cabbage, fresh mint, potato curry, masala, chili powder, salt and lime[53]
  • Kya zan thoke – glass vermicelli salad with boiled prawn julienne and mashed curried duck eggs and potatoes.

Curries

 
A traditional Danu-style meal featuring a curry broth, rice disks, and a requisite plate of blanched vegetables and dip.

Burmese curry refers to a diverse array of dishes in Burmese cuisine that consist of protein or vegetables simmered or stewed in an base of aromatics.[2] Burmese curries generally differ from other Southeast Asian curries (e.g., Thai curry) in that Burmese curries make use of dried spices, in addition to fresh herbs and aromatics, and are often milder.[54] The most common variety of curry is called sibyan (ဆီပြန်; lit.'oil returns'), which is typified by a layer of oil that separates from the gravy and meat after cooked.[55] Pork, chicken, goat, shrimp, and fish are commonly prepared in Burmese curries.

  • Pork sibyan (ဝက်သားဆီပြန်) – classic Burmese curry with fatty cuts of pork[56]
  • Chicken sibyan (ကြက်သားဆီပြန်) – the classic Burmese curry, served with a thick gravy of aromatics[36][57]
  • Bachelor's chicken curry (ကြက်ကာလသားချက်) – a red and watery chicken curry cooked with calabash[58][36]
  • Goat hnat (ဆိတ်သားနှပ်) – a braised goat curry spiced with masala, cinnamon sticks, bay leaf, and cloves[59]
  • Nga thalaut paung (ငါးသလောက်ပေါင်း [ŋəθəlaʊʔbáʊɴ]) – a curry of hilsa fish and tomatoes, which is slowly simmered to melt the fish bones[60]
  • Egg curry (ဘဲဥချဥ်ရည်ဟင်း) – a sour curry made with hardboiled duck or chicken eggs, cooked in tamarind paste and mashed tomatoes[3]

Soups

 
Dandalun chinyay, a sour soup with chopped drumsticks

In Burmese cuisine, soups typically accompany meals featuring both rice and noodles, and are paired accordingly to balance contrasting flavors. Lightly flavored soups, called hin gyo (ဟင်းချို) are served with saltier dishes, while sour soups, called chinyay hin (ချဉ်ရည်ဟင်း), are paired with rich, fatty Burmese curries.[3]

Thizon chinyay (သီးစုံချဉ်ရည် [θízòʊɴ tʃìɴjè], lit.'sour soup of assorted vegetables'), cooked with drumstick, lady's finger, eggplant, green beans, potato, onions, ginger, dried chilli, boiled eggs, dried salted fish, fish paste and tamarind, is an elevated version of chinyay hin, and served during festive occasions.[3]

Other grains and breads

 
Palata is commonly dusted with sugar as a dessert or teatime snack.

Indian breads are commonly eaten for breakfast or teatime in Myanmar. Palata (ပလာတာ), also known as htattaya (ထပ်တစ်ရာ), a flaky fried flatbread related to Indian paratha, is often eaten with curried meats or as dessert with sprinkled sugar,[61] while nanbya (နံပြား), a baked flatbread, is eaten with any Indian dishes.[36] Other favorites include aloo poori (အာလူးပူရီ), chapati (ချပါတီ), and appam (အာပုံ).[62][63]

 
Burmese-style omelette fried with acacia leaves

Other dishes include:

  • Burmese tofu (ရှမ်းတို့ဟူး [ʃáɴ tòhú]) – a tofu of Shan origin made from chickpea flour, eaten as fritters, in a salad, or in porridge forms
  • A sein kyaw (အစိမ်းကြော် [ʔəséɪɴdʒɔ̀]) – cabbage, cauliflower, carrot, green beans, baby corn, corn flour or tapioca starch, tomatoes, squid sauce[64]
  • Ngapi daung (ငါးပိထောင်း) – a spicy Rakhine-style condiment made from pounded ngapi and green chili
  • Nga baung htoke (ငါးပေါင်းထုပ် [ŋəbáʊɴ doʊʔ]) – a Mon-style steamed parcel of mixed vegetables and prawns, wrapped in morinda and banana leaves[65]
  • Wet tha chin (ဝက်သားချဉ် [wɛʔ θə dʑɪ̀ɴ]) – Shan-style preserved minced pork in rice[66]

Snacks

 
A street hawker in Ponnagyun selling an assotment of fritters and mont to passersby.

Burmese cuisine has a wide variety of traditional snacks called mont, ranging from sweet desserts to savory food items that are steamed, baked, fried, deep-fried, or boiled. Traditional Burmese fritters, consisting of vegetables or seafood that have been battered and deep-fried, are also eaten as snacks or as toppings.[67]

Savory snacks include:

  • Hpet htok (lit.'leaf wrap', ဖက်ထုပ် [pʰɛʔtʰoʊʔ]) – meat, pastry paper, ginger, garlic, pepper powder, and salt. Usually served with soup or noodles.
  • Samusa (စမူဆာ [səmùzà]) – Burmese-style samosa with mutton and onions served with fresh mint, green chilli, onions and lime
  • Burmese pork offal skewers (ဝက်သား တုတ်ထိုး [wɛʔθá doʊʔtʰó]) – pork offal cooked in light soy sauce, and eaten with raw ginger and chili sauce.
  • Htamane (ထမနဲ [tʰəmənɛ́]) – dessert made from glutinous rice, shredded coconuts and peanuts

Sweet snacks include:

Fruits and fruit preserves

 
A street-side fruit stall in Yangon.

Myanmar has a wide range of fruits, mostly of tropical origin. Fruit is commonly eaten as a snack or dessert.[2] While most fruits are eaten fresh, a few, including jengkol, are boiled, roasted or otherwise cooked. Popular fruits include banana, mango, watermelon, papaya, jujube, avocado, pomelo, and guava.[71] Others include marian plum, mangosteen, sugar-apple, rambutan, durian, jackfruit, lychee, and pomegranate. Burmese fruit preserves, called yo (ယို), are also commonly eaten as standalone snacks. Common ones include fruit preserves made from fig, jujube, marian plum, citrus, mango, pineapple, and durian.

300 cultivars of mango are grown in Myanmar, the most popular being seintalon (စိန်တစ်လုံး, lit.'one diamond').[72] 13 species of banana are locally cultivated in Myanmar, including the following cultivars:[73]

  • red - locally called shweni (ရွှေနီ, lit.'golden red')
  • Dwarf Cavendish - locally called htawbat (သီးမွှေး, lit.'fragrant fruit')
  • Mysore - locally called Rakhine (ရခိုင်)
  • Latundan - locally called htawbat (ထောပတ်, lit.'butter')

Beverages

 
Clay pots containing drinking water are commonly seen throughout Myanmar, left for travellers and passersby to rehydrate.

Tea is the national drink of Myanmar, reflecting the influence of Buddhism and its views on temperance.[74] Tea is central to Burmese dining culture; complimentary green tea is customarily served to diners at restaurants and teashops alike.[75] Various liquid concoctions made from fruits and coconut milk, including sugarcane juice, and mont let hsaung (မုန့်လက်ဆောင်း) are also popular.[76] Indigenous fermented drinks like palm wine are also found across the country. During a traditional Burmese meal, drinks are not often served; instead, the usual liquid refreshment is a light broth or consommé served from a communal bowl.

Burmese tea

 
Snacks served at a Burmese tea house alongside Burmese milk tea.

Plain green tea, yay nway gyan (ရေနွေးကြမ်း, lit.'crude tea water'), is a popular form of tea drunk in Myanmar.[30] Tea leaves are traditionally cultivated in Shan State and Kachin State.[30] Milk tea, called laphet yay cho (လက်ဖက်ရည်ချို), made with strongly brewed black tea leaves, and sweetened with a customized ratio of condensed milk and evaporated milk, is also popular.[77][7]

Alcohol

 
Shwe yin aye is a popular and refreshing dessert

Palm wine, called htan yay (ထန်းရည်), made from the fermented sap of the toddy palm, is traditionally consumed in rural parts of Upper Myanmar[78] Ethnic communities, including the Kachin and Shan, also brew local moonshines.[79] Several ethnic minorities traditionally brew alcoholic beverages using rice or glutinous rice called khaung [my] (ခေါင်ရည်).[80] The khaung of the Chin peoples is brewed using millet seeds.[80] Locally brewed beers include Irrawaddy, Mandalay, Myanmar, and Tiger.[74]

Food establishments

Restaurants

Dine-in restaurants that serve steamed rice with traditional Burmese curries and dishes are called htamin saing (ထမင်းဆိုင်; lit.'rice shop').

Tea shops

 
An outdoor café in Yangon

During British rule in Burma, Burmese Indians introduced tea shops to the country, first known as kaka hsaing, which later evolved into teashops called laphet yay hsaing (လက်ဖက်ရည်ဆိုင်) or kaphi (ကဖီး), the latter word from French café. Burmese tea shop culture emerged from a combination of British, Indian, and Chinese influences throughout the colonial period.[81] Teashops are prevalent across the country, forming an important part of communal life.[31][82] Typically open throughout the day, some Burmese tea shops cater to locals, long distance drivers and travellers alike. The Burmese typically gather in tea shops to drink milk tea served with an extensive array of snacks and meals.[81]

Street food

 
A street hawker selling Burmese pork offal skewers.

Street food stalls and hawkers are a feature of the Burmese urban landscape, especially in major cities like Yangon.[83] Burmese salads, snacks, and fritters are especially popular street foods.[84] In recent years, some major cities have clamped down on street food vendors. In 2016, Yangon banned the city's 6,000 street vendors from selling food on major thoroughfares, and relocated them to formal night markets set up by the city.[85]

Night markets, called nya zay (ညဈေး), are a feature of many Burmese towns and cities. Colonial observers as early as 1878 noted Burmese street hawkers selling delicacies such as fruits, cakes, and laphet during "night bazaars."[86] The streets surrounding major daytime markets, such as Zegyo Market in Mandalay, typically double as makeshift night markets during the evenings.[87]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The traditional rhyme is "A thee ma, thayet; a thar ma, wet; a ywet ma, lahpet" (အသီးမှာသရက်၊ အသားမှာဝက်၊ အရွက်မှာလက်ဖက်။).
  2. ^ The traditional Burmese proverb reads မန္တလေးစကား ရန်ကုန်အကြွား မော်လမြိုင်အစား.

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Further reading

  • Myanmar Business Today; Print Edition, 27 February 2014. A Roadmap to Building Myanmar into the Food Basket of Asia, by David DuByne & Hishamuddin Koh

External links

  • Guide to eating vegetarian in Myanmar
  • Mi Mi Khaing, Cook and Entertain the Burmese Way. Rangoon, 1975

burmese, cuisine, this, article, contains, burmese, script, without, proper, rendering, support, question, marks, boxes, other, symbols, instead, burmese, script, burmese, အစ, အစ, encompasses, diverse, regional, culinary, traditions, myanmar, which, have, deve. This article contains Burmese script Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols instead of Burmese script Burmese cuisine Burmese မ န မ အစ အစ encompasses the diverse regional culinary traditions of Myanmar which have developed through longstanding agricultural practices centuries of sociopolitical and economic change and cross cultural contact and trade with neighboring countries at the confluence of South Asia Southeast Asia and East Asia including the modern day nations of India China and Thailand 1 Laphet served in a traditional lacquer tray called laphet ok Burmese cuisine is typified by a wide ranging array of dishes including traditional Burmese curries Burmese salads and soups that are traditionally eaten with white rice 2 Burmese cuisine also features noodles in many forms as fried or dry noodles noodle soups or as noodle salads as well as Indian breads Street food culture has also nurtured the profuse variety of traditional Burmese fritters and traditional snacks called mont The contrasting flavor profile of Burmese cuisine is broadly captured in the phrase chin ngan sat ခ ဉ ငန စပ which literally means sour salty and spicy 3 A popular Burmese rhyme of all the fruit the mango s the best of all the meat the pork s the best and of all the leaves lahpet s the best sums up the traditional favourites Note 1 Contents 1 History 2 Etiquette and customs 2 1 Dining 2 2 Religious practices 2 3 Beef taboo 2 4 Food theories 3 Cooking techniques 4 Regional and variant cuisines 5 Dishes and ingredients 5 1 Preserved foods 5 2 Rice 5 3 Noodles 5 4 Salads 5 5 Curries 5 6 Soups 5 7 Other grains and breads 5 8 Snacks 5 9 Fruits and fruit preserves 6 Beverages 6 1 Burmese tea 6 2 Alcohol 7 Food establishments 7 1 Restaurants 7 2 Tea shops 7 3 Street food 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksHistory Edit A traditional Burmese painting depicts the Royal Ploughing Ceremony during which the monarch ceremonially ploughs a rice field outside the royal palace to mark the traditional start of the rice growing season Rice is the principal staple in Burmese cuisine reflecting several millennia of rice cultivation which first emerged in the country s Chindwin Ayeyarwady and Thanlwin river valleys between 11 000 and 5000 BCE 4 By 3000 BCE irrigated rice cultivation flourished paralleled by the domestication of cattle and pigs by inhabitants 4 In addition to rice tea originated in the borderlands separating Myanmar from China precipitating a longstanding tradition of tea consumption and the development of pickled tea known as laphet which continues to play a pivotal role in Burmese ritual culture 5 6 This longstanding history is reflected in the Burmese language which is among the few world languages whose word for tea is not etymologically traced back to the Chinese word for tea see etymology of tea 7 Agrarian settlements were settled by ancestors of Myanmar s modern day ethnolinguistic groups From these settlements emerged a succession of Burmese Mon Shan Rakhine speaking kingdoms and tributary states that now make up contemporary Myanmar Paddy rice cultivation remains synonymous with the predominantly Buddhist Bamar Mon Shan and Rakhine peoples who inhabit the country s fertile lowlands and plateaus 8 Burmese cuisine has been significantly enriched by contact and trade with neighboring kingdoms and countries well into modern times The Columbian exchange in the 15th and 16th centuries introduced key ingredients into the Burmese culinary repertoire including tomatoes chili peppers peanuts and potatoes 9 A series of Burmese Siamese wars between the 16th to 19th centuries resulted in the emergence of Thai inspired delicacies including khanon dok shwe yin aye mont let hsaung and Yodaya mont di 10 Buddhist monks in Mandalay receive food alms from a htamane hawker during their daily alms round ဆ မ လ င လ ည While record keeping of pre colonial culinary traditions is scant food was and remains deeply intertwined with religious life especially among Buddhist communities exemplified in the giving of food alms dana and communal feasts called satuditha and ahlu pwe အလ ပ One of the few remaining pre colonial cookbooks is the Sadawhset Kyan စ တ ဆက က မ lit Treatise on Royal Foods written on a palm leaf manuscript in 1866 during the Konbaung dynasty 11 By the Konbaung dynasty 16th to 19th centuries elaborate preparations of food played a central role in key court ceremonies e g naming ceremonies wedding ceremonies etc including as ritual offerings to Hindu and indigenous deities and as celebratory meals for attendees 12 British rule in Burma between the 19th and 20th centuries led to the establishment of Burmese Indian and Sino Burmese communities that introduced novel cooking techniques ingredients food vocabulary and fusion dishes that are now considered integral parts of Burmese cuisine 13 These range from Indian breads such as naan and paratha to Chinese stir frying techniques and ingredients like tofu and soy sauce Etiquette and customs EditDining Edit A traditional Burmese meal includes a bowl of soup rice several meat curries and ngapi yay a dip or dipping sauce with tozaya vegetables for dipping Traditionally the Burmese eat meals from plates on a low table or daunglan while sitting on a bamboo mat 14 Dishes are simultaneously served and shared 14 A traditional meal includes steamed white rice as the main dish accompanied by Burmese curries a light soup or consomme and other side dishes including fried vegetables Burmese fritters and ngapi yay gyo င ပ ရည က a plate of fresh and blanched vegetables served with pickled fish dip The meal is then finished with a piece of palm sugar or laphet fermented tea leaves 15 Out of respect the eldest diners are always served first before the rest join in even when the elders are absent the first morsel of rice from the pot is scooped and put aside as an act of respect to one s parents a custom known as u cha ဦ ခ lit first serve 16 The Burmese traditionally eat with their right hand forming the rice into a small ball with only the fingertips and mixing this with various morsels before popping it into their mouths 16 Chopsticks and Chinese style spoons are used for noodle dishes although noodle salads are more likely to be eaten with just a spoon Western style utensils especially forks and knives have gained currency in recent years Religious practices Edit The country s diverse religious makeup influences its cuisine as Buddhists and Hindus traditionally avoid beef and Muslims pork Beef is considered taboo by devout Buddhists and farmers because the cow is highly regarded as a beast of burden 17 Vegetarianism is commonly practiced by Buddhists during the three month Vassa ဝ တ င between July and October as well as during Uposatha days reflected in the Burmese word for vegetarian thet that lut သက သတ လ တ lit free of killing During this time devout Buddhists observe eight or more precepts including fasting rules that restrict food intake to two daily meals i e breakfast and lunch taken before noon Beef taboo Edit The beef taboo is fairly widespread in Myanmar particularly in the Buddhist community In Myanmar beef is typically obtained from cattle that are slaughtered at the end of their working lives 16 years of age or from sick animals 18 Cattle is rarely raised for meat 58 of cattle in the country is used for draught animal power 18 Few people eat beef and there is a general dislike of beef especially among the Bamar and Burmese Chinese 19 20 although it is more commonly eaten in regional cuisines particularly those of ethnic minorities like the Kachin 21 Buddhists when giving up meat during the Buddhist Vassa or Uposatha days will forego beef first 22 Butchers tend to be Muslim because of the Buddhist doctrine of ahimsa no harm 23 During the country s last dynasty the Konbaung dynasty habitual consumption of beef was punishable by public flogging 24 In 1885 Ledi Sayadaw a prominent Buddhist monk wrote the Nwa myitta sa န မ တ တ စ a poetic prose letter which argued that Burmese Buddhists should not kill cattle and eat beef because Burmese farmers depended on them as beasts of burden to maintain their livelihoods that the marketing of beef for human consumption threatened the extinction of buffalo and cattle and that the practice was ecologically unsound 25 He subsequently led successful beef boycotts during the colonial era and influenced a generation of Burmese nationalists in adopting this stance 25 On 29 August 1961 the Burmese Parliament passed the State Religion Promotion Act of 1961 which explicitly banned the slaughtering of cattle nationwide beef became known as todo tha တ တ သ lit hush hush meat 26 Religious groups such as Muslims were required to apply for exemption licences to slaughter cattle on religious holidays This ban was repealed a year later after Ne Win led a coup d etat and declared martial law in the country Food theories Edit In traditional Burmese medicine foods are divided into two classes heating အပ စ apu za or cooling အအ စ a aye za based on their effects on one s body system similar to the Chinese classification of food 16 Examples of heating foods include chicken bitter melon durian mango chocolate and ice cream Examples of cooling foods include pork eggplant dairy products cucumbers and radish The Burmese also hold several taboos and superstitions regarding consumption during various occasions in one s life especially pregnancy For instance pregnant women are not supposed to eat chili due to the belief that it causes children to have sparse scalp hairs 16 Cooking techniques EditThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it January 2021 Beans and pulses are commonly used in Burmese cuisine Burmese dishes are not cooked with precise recipes The use and portion of ingredients used may vary but the precision of timing is of utmost importance 16 11 Burmese dishes may be stewed boiled fried roasted steamed baked or grilled or any combination of the said techniques 11 Burmese curries use only a handful of spices in comparison to Indian ones and use more fresh garlic and ginger 11 Regional and variant cuisines Edit Htamin jin fermented rice kneaded with fish and or potato with twice fried Shan tofu is a popular local dish at Inle Lake Broadly speaking Burmese cuisine is divided between the culinary traditions of Upper Myanmar which is inland and landlocked and Lower Myanmar which is surrounded by numerous rivers river deltas and the Andaman Sea 27 Variations between regional cuisines are largely driven by the availability of fresh ingredients Myanmar s long coastline has provided an abundant source of fresh seafood which is particularly associated with Rakhine cuisine 28 Southern Myanmar particularly the area around Mawlamyaing is known for its cuisine as the Burmese proverb goes Mandalay for eloquence Yangon for boasting Mawlamyaing for food 29 Note 2 Cuisine in Lower Myanmar including Yangon and Mawlamyaing makes extensive use of fish and seafood based products like fish sauce and ngapi fermented seafood 27 The cuisine in Upper Myanmar including the Bamar heartland Mandalay Magway and Sagaing Regions Shan State and Kachin States tends to use more meat poultry pulses and beans 27 The level of spices and use of fresh herbs varies depending on the region Kachin and Shan curries will often use more fresh herbs 2 Fusion Chettiar ခ စ တ က လ cuisine originating from Southern Indian cuisine is also popular in cities Dishes and ingredients EditMain articles List of Burmese dishes and List of Ingredients in Burmese cuisine Because a standardised system of romanisation for spoken Burmese does not exist pronunciations of the following dishes in modern standard Burmese approximated using IPA are provided see IPA Burmese for details Preserved foods Edit Main articles Ngapi and Lahpet A plate of ngapi yay gyo is surrounded by an assortment of traditional Burmese side dishes Myanmar is one of very few countries where tea is not only drunk but eaten as lahpet pickled tea served with various accompaniments 30 31 The practice of eating tea dates in modern day Myanmar back to prehistoric antiquity reflecting the legacy of indigenous tribes who pickled and fermented tea leaves inside bamboo tubes bamboo baskets plantain leaves and pots 7 Tea leaves are traditionally cultivated by the Palaung people 7 Pickled tea leaves continue to play an important role in Burmese culture today 7 Ngapi င ပ a fermented paste made from salted fish or shrimp is considered the cornerstone of any Burmese traditional meal It is used to season many soups salads curries and dishes and condiments imparting a rich umami flavor 2 The ngapi of Rakhine State contains no or little salt and uses marine fish Meanwhile ngapi made with freshwater fish is common in Ayeyarwady and Tanintharyi regions Ngapi yay င ပ ရည is an essential part of Karen and Bamar cuisine in which a sauce dip of ngapi cooked in various vegetables and spices is served with blanched and fresh vegetables similar to Thai nam phrik Indonesian lalab and Malay ulam Dried fermented bean cakes called pe bok are grilled or fried in Shan cooking Shan cuisine traditionally uses fermented beans called pe ngapi ပ င ပ lit bean ngapi in lieu of ngapi to impart umami 2 Dried bean ngapi chips ပ ပ ပ lit spoiled beans are used as condiments for various Shan dishes 32 Pon ye gyi ပ ရည က a thick salty black paste made from fermented beans is popular in the Bamar heartland It is used in cooking especially with pork and as a salad with peanut oil chopped onions and red chili Bagan is an important pon ye gyi producer 33 Burmese cuisine also features a wide variety of pickled vegetables and fruits that are preserved in oil and spices or in brine and rice wine 3 The former called thanat သနပ are similar to South Asian pickles including mango pickle The latter are called chinbat ခ ဉ ဖတ and include pickles like mohnyin gyin Rice Edit Buddhist monks cooking rice at the Mahagandhayon Monastery in Amarapura The most common staple in Myanmar is steamed rice called htamin ထမင Fragrant aromatic varieties of white rice including paw hsan hmwe ပ ဆန မ are popular Lower amylose varieties of glutinous rice which are called kauk hnyin က က ည င also feature in Burmese cuisine including a purple variety called ngacheik ငခ ပ Consumers in the northern highlands e g Shan State prefer stickier lower amylose varieties like kauk hnyin and kauk sei while consumers in lower delta regions preferring higher amylose varieties like kauk chaw and kauk kyan 34 Lower amylose varieties of rice are commonly used in traditional Burmese snacks called mont 34 While rice is traditionally eaten plain flavored versions like buttered rice and coconut rice are commonplace festive staples 35 Hsi htamin glutinous rice seasoned with oil and turmeric is a popular breakfast food Htamin gyaw ထမင က tʰemɪ ɴ dʒɔ fried rice with boiled peas sometimes with meat sausage and eggs 36 San byok ဆန ပ တ sʰaɴbjoʊʔ rice congee with fish chicken or duck often fed to invalids Danbauk ဒ ပ က daɴbaʊʔ from Persian dum pukht Burmese style biryani with either chicken or mutton served with mango pickle a fresh salad of sliced onions julienned cabbage sliced cucumbers fermented limes and lemons fried dried chilies and soup 37 38 Htamin jin ထမင ခ ဉ tʰemiɴ dʒɪ ɴ a rice tomato and potato or fish salad kneaded into round balls dressed and garnished with crisp fried onion in oil tamarind sauce coriander and spring onions often with garlic Chinese chive roots fried whole dried chili grilled dried fermented bean cakes pe bok and fried dried tofu tohu gyauk kyaw on the side 39 Thingyan rice သင က န ထမင dedʒaɴ tʰemɪ ɴ fully boiled rice in candle smelt water served with pickled marian plums 40 Noodles Edit Rice noodles sun drying in Hsipaw Burmese cuisine uses a wide variety of noodles which are prepared in soups salads or other dry noodle dishes and typically eaten outside of lunch or as a snack 2 Fresh thin rice noodles called mont bat မ န ဖတ or mont di မ န တ are similar to Thai khanom chin and feature in Myanmar s national dish mohinga Burmese cuisine also has a category of rice noodles of varying sizes and shapes called nan including nangyi နန က thick udon like noodles nanlat နန လတ medium sized rice noodles nanthe နန သ thinner rice noodles and nanbya နန ပ flat rice noodles 41 Cellophane noodles called kyazan က ဆ lit lotus thread and wheat based noodles called khauk swe ခ က ဆ 41 are often used in salads soups and stir fries 2 Shan khao swe and tohpu jaw with monnyin gyin on the side Dry or fried noodle dishes include Kat kyi kaik ကတ က က က kaʔtɕigaɪʔ lit bitten with scissors a southern coastal dish from the Dawei area of flat rice noodles with a variety of seafood land meats raw bean sprouts beans and fried eggs comparable to pad thai 42 Meeshay မ ရ mjiʃe rice noodles with pork or chicken bean sprouts rice flour gel rice flour fritters dressed with soy sauce salted soybean rice vinegar fried peanut oil chilli oil and garnished with crisp fried onions crushed garlic coriander and pickled white radish mustard greens Mont di an extremely popular and economical fast food dish where rice vermicelli are either eaten with some condiments and soup prepared from ngapi or as a salad with powdered fish and some condiments Panthay khao swe ပန သ ခ က ဆ paɴde kʰaʊʔ sʰwɛ halal egg noodles with a spiced chicken curry The dish is associated with Panthay community a group of Burmese Chinese Muslims 43 Sigyet khauk swe ဆ ခ က ခ က ဆ sʰidʑɛʔ kʰaʊʔ sʰwɛ wheat noodles with duck or pork fried garlic oil soy sauce and chopped spring onions The dish originated from with the Sino Burmese community 44 Mandalay meeshay served with a thin hingyo broth Noodle soups include Mohinga မ န ဟင ခ mo ʊɴhiɰ ɡa the unofficial national dish made with fresh thin rice noodles in a fish broth with onions garlic ginger lemon grass and tender banana stem cores served with boiled eggs fried fishcake and Burmese fritters 45 Ohn no khauk swe အ န န ခ က ဆ ʔoʊɴno kʰaʊʔsʰwɛ curried chicken and wheat noodles in a coconut milk broth It is comparable to Malaysian laksa and Northern Thai khao soi 46 Kyay oh က အ tʃe ʔo rice noodles in a broth of pork offal and egg traditionally served in copper pot 47 Kawyei khao swe က ရည ခ က ဆ kɔ je kʰaʊʔ sʰwɛ noodles and duck or pork curried with five spice powder in broth with eggs comparable to Singaporean Malaysian lor mee 48 Mi swan မ စ မ mju swaɴ thin wheat noodles known as misua in Singapore and Malaysia It is a popular option for invalids usually with chicken broth Shan khauk swe ရ မ ခ က ဆ ʃaɴ kʰaʊʔsʰwɛ rice noodles with chicken or minced pork onions garlic tomatoes chili crushed roasted peanuts young snowpea vine served with tofu fritters and pickled mustard greens 49 Salads Edit Main article Burmese salads Samosa salad in MandalayBurmese salads အသ ပ transliterated athoke or athouk are a diverse category of indigenous salads in Burmese cuisine Burmese salads are made of cooked and raw ingredients that are mixed by hand to combine and balance a wide ranging array of flavors and textures 50 Burmese salads are eaten as standalone snacks as side dishes paired with Burmese curries and as entrees 51 Thayet chin thoke fermented green mango salad with onions green chilli roasted peanuts sesame and peanut oil Lahpet thoke လက ဖက သ ပ lepʰɛʔ doʊʔ a salad of pickled tea leaves with fried peas peanuts and garlic toasted sesame fresh garlic tomato green chili crushed dried shrimps preserved ginger and dressed with peanut oil fish sauce and lime 3 Gyin thoke ခ င သ ပ dʒɪ ɰ doʊʔ a salad of pickled ginger with sesame seeds 3 Khauk swe thoke ခ က ဆ သ ပ kʰaʊʔsʰwɛ doʊʔ wheat noodle salad with dried shrimps shredded cabbage and carrots dressed with fried peanut oil fish sauce and lime Let thoke son လက သ ပ စ lɛʔ 8oʊʔzoʊɴ similar to htamin thoke with shredded green papaya shredded carrot ogonori sea moss and often wheat noodles Nan gyi thoke နန က သ ပ naɰ dʒi doʊʔ or Mandalay mont di thick rice noodle salad with chickpea flour chicken fish cake onions coriander spring onions crushed dried chilli dressed with fried crispy onion oil fish sauce and lime 52 Samusa thoke စမ ဆ သ ပ semusʰa doʊʔ samosa salad with onions cabbage fresh mint potato curry masala chili powder salt and lime 53 Kya zan thoke glass vermicelli salad with boiled prawn julienne and mashed curried duck eggs and potatoes Curries Edit Main article Burmese curry A traditional Danu style meal featuring a curry broth rice disks and a requisite plate of blanched vegetables and dip Burmese curry refers to a diverse array of dishes in Burmese cuisine that consist of protein or vegetables simmered or stewed in an base of aromatics 2 Burmese curries generally differ from other Southeast Asian curries e g Thai curry in that Burmese curries make use of dried spices in addition to fresh herbs and aromatics and are often milder 54 The most common variety of curry is called sibyan ဆ ပ န lit oil returns which is typified by a layer of oil that separates from the gravy and meat after cooked 55 Pork chicken goat shrimp and fish are commonly prepared in Burmese curries Pork sibyan ဝက သ ဆ ပ န classic Burmese curry with fatty cuts of pork 56 Chicken sibyan က က သ ဆ ပ န the classic Burmese curry served with a thick gravy of aromatics 36 57 Bachelor s chicken curry က က က လသ ခ က a red and watery chicken curry cooked with calabash 58 36 Goat hnat ဆ တ သ န ပ a braised goat curry spiced with masala cinnamon sticks bay leaf and cloves 59 Nga thalaut paung င သလ က ပ င ŋe8elaʊʔbaʊɴ a curry of hilsa fish and tomatoes which is slowly simmered to melt the fish bones 60 Egg curry ဘ ဥခ ဥ ရည ဟင a sour curry made with hardboiled duck or chicken eggs cooked in tamarind paste and mashed tomatoes 3 Soups Edit Dandalun chinyay a sour soup with chopped drumsticks In Burmese cuisine soups typically accompany meals featuring both rice and noodles and are paired accordingly to balance contrasting flavors Lightly flavored soups called hin gyo ဟင ခ are served with saltier dishes while sour soups called chinyay hin ခ ဉ ရည ဟင are paired with rich fatty Burmese curries 3 Thizon chinyay သ စ ခ ဉ ရည 8izoʊɴ tʃiɴje lit sour soup of assorted vegetables cooked with drumstick lady s finger eggplant green beans potato onions ginger dried chilli boiled eggs dried salted fish fish paste and tamarind is an elevated version of chinyay hin and served during festive occasions 3 Other grains and breads Edit Palata is commonly dusted with sugar as a dessert or teatime snack Indian breads are commonly eaten for breakfast or teatime in Myanmar Palata ပလ တ also known as htattaya ထပ တစ ရ a flaky fried flatbread related to Indian paratha is often eaten with curried meats or as dessert with sprinkled sugar 61 while nanbya န ပ a baked flatbread is eaten with any Indian dishes 36 Other favorites include aloo poori အ လ ပ ရ chapati ခ ပ တ and appam အ ပ 62 63 Burmese style omelette fried with acacia leaves Other dishes include Burmese tofu ရ မ တ ဟ ʃaɴ tohu a tofu of Shan origin made from chickpea flour eaten as fritters in a salad or in porridge forms A sein kyaw အစ မ က ʔeseɪɴdʒɔ cabbage cauliflower carrot green beans baby corn corn flour or tapioca starch tomatoes squid sauce 64 Ngapi daung င ပ ထ င a spicy Rakhine style condiment made from pounded ngapi and green chili Nga baung htoke င ပ င ထ ပ ŋebaʊɴ doʊʔ a Mon style steamed parcel of mixed vegetables and prawns wrapped in morinda and banana leaves 65 Wet tha chin ဝက သ ခ ဉ wɛʔ 8e dʑɪ ɴ Shan style preserved minced pork in rice 66 Snacks Edit Main articles Mont food and Burmese fritters A street hawker in Ponnagyun selling an assotment of fritters and mont to passersby Burmese cuisine has a wide variety of traditional snacks called mont ranging from sweet desserts to savory food items that are steamed baked fried deep fried or boiled Traditional Burmese fritters consisting of vegetables or seafood that have been battered and deep fried are also eaten as snacks or as toppings 67 Savory snacks include Hpet htok lit leaf wrap ဖက ထ ပ pʰɛʔtʰoʊʔ meat pastry paper ginger garlic pepper powder and salt Usually served with soup or noodles Samusa စမ ဆ semuza Burmese style samosa with mutton and onions served with fresh mint green chilli onions and lime Burmese pork offal skewers ဝက သ တ တ ထ wɛʔ8a doʊʔtʰo pork offal cooked in light soy sauce and eaten with raw ginger and chili sauce Htamane ထမန tʰemenɛ dessert made from glutinous rice shredded coconuts and peanutsSweet snacks include Mont let hsaung မ န လက ဆ င mo ʊɴlɛʔsʰaʊɴ tapioca or rice noodles glutinous rice grated coconut and toasted sesame with jaggery syrup in coconut milk 68 Sanwin makin ဆန င မကင sʰa nwɪ ɴ megɪ ɴ semolina cake with raisins walnuts and poppy seeds 3 Shwe yin aye ရ ရင အ ʃwe jɪ ɴ ʔe agar jelly tapioca and sago in coconut milk Pathein halawa ပ သ မ ဟလဝ pe8eɪɴ ha lewa a sticky sweetmeat made of glutinous rice butter coconut milk 69 inspired by Indian halwa Hpaluda ဖ လ ဒ pʰaluda rose water milk coconut jelly coconut shavings sometimes served with egg custard and ice cream similar to Indian falooda 3 Ngapyaw baung င က ပ ပ င A Mon style dessert of bananas stewed in milk and coconut and garnished with black sesame 70 Saw hlaing mont စ လ င မ န a Rakhine style baked sweet made from millet raisins coconut and butterFruits and fruit preserves Edit A street side fruit stall in Yangon Myanmar has a wide range of fruits mostly of tropical origin Fruit is commonly eaten as a snack or dessert 2 While most fruits are eaten fresh a few including jengkol are boiled roasted or otherwise cooked Popular fruits include banana mango watermelon papaya jujube avocado pomelo and guava 71 Others include marian plum mangosteen sugar apple rambutan durian jackfruit lychee and pomegranate Burmese fruit preserves called yo ယ are also commonly eaten as standalone snacks Common ones include fruit preserves made from fig jujube marian plum citrus mango pineapple and durian 300 cultivars of mango are grown in Myanmar the most popular being seintalon စ န တစ လ lit one diamond 72 13 species of banana are locally cultivated in Myanmar including the following cultivars 73 red locally called shweni ရ န lit golden red Dwarf Cavendish locally called htawbat သ မ lit fragrant fruit Mysore locally called Rakhine ရခ င Latundan locally called htawbat ထ ပတ lit butter Beverages Edit Clay pots containing drinking water are commonly seen throughout Myanmar left for travellers and passersby to rehydrate Tea is the national drink of Myanmar reflecting the influence of Buddhism and its views on temperance 74 Tea is central to Burmese dining culture complimentary green tea is customarily served to diners at restaurants and teashops alike 75 Various liquid concoctions made from fruits and coconut milk including sugarcane juice and mont let hsaung မ န လက ဆ င are also popular 76 Indigenous fermented drinks like palm wine are also found across the country During a traditional Burmese meal drinks are not often served instead the usual liquid refreshment is a light broth or consomme served from a communal bowl Burmese tea Edit Snacks served at a Burmese tea house alongside Burmese milk tea Main articles Laphet and Burmese milk tea Plain green tea yay nway gyan ရ န က မ lit crude tea water is a popular form of tea drunk in Myanmar 30 Tea leaves are traditionally cultivated in Shan State and Kachin State 30 Milk tea called laphet yay cho လက ဖက ရည ခ made with strongly brewed black tea leaves and sweetened with a customized ratio of condensed milk and evaporated milk is also popular 77 7 Alcohol Edit See also Beer in Myanmar Shwe yin aye is a popular and refreshing dessert Palm wine called htan yay ထန ရည made from the fermented sap of the toddy palm is traditionally consumed in rural parts of Upper Myanmar 78 Ethnic communities including the Kachin and Shan also brew local moonshines 79 Several ethnic minorities traditionally brew alcoholic beverages using rice or glutinous rice called khaung my ခ င ရည 80 The khaung of the Chin peoples is brewed using millet seeds 80 Locally brewed beers include Irrawaddy Mandalay Myanmar and Tiger 74 Food establishments EditRestaurants Edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it January 2021 Dine in restaurants that serve steamed rice with traditional Burmese curries and dishes are called htamin saing ထမင ဆ င lit rice shop Tea shops Edit An outdoor cafe in YangonDuring British rule in Burma Burmese Indians introduced tea shops to the country first known as kaka hsaing which later evolved into teashops called laphet yay hsaing လက ဖက ရည ဆ င or kaphi ကဖ the latter word from French cafe Burmese tea shop culture emerged from a combination of British Indian and Chinese influences throughout the colonial period 81 Teashops are prevalent across the country forming an important part of communal life 31 82 Typically open throughout the day some Burmese tea shops cater to locals long distance drivers and travellers alike The Burmese typically gather in tea shops to drink milk tea served with an extensive array of snacks and meals 81 Street food Edit A street hawker selling Burmese pork offal skewers Street food stalls and hawkers are a feature of the Burmese urban landscape especially in major cities like Yangon 83 Burmese salads snacks and fritters are especially popular street foods 84 In recent years some major cities have clamped down on street food vendors In 2016 Yangon banned the city s 6 000 street vendors from selling food on major thoroughfares and relocated them to formal night markets set up by the city 85 Night markets called nya zay ညဈ are a feature of many Burmese towns and cities Colonial observers as early as 1878 noted Burmese street hawkers selling delicacies such as fruits cakes and laphet during night bazaars 86 The streets surrounding major daytime markets such as Zegyo Market in Mandalay typically double as makeshift night markets during the evenings 87 See also Edit This article contains Burmese script Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols instead of Burmese script Myanmar Culture of Myanmar Rice production in Myanmar Food portal Myanmar portalNotes Edit The traditional rhyme is A thee ma thayet a thar ma wet a ywet ma lahpet အသ မ သရက အသ မ ဝက အရ က မ လက ဖက The traditional Burmese proverb reads မန တလ စက ရန က န အက မ လမ င အစ References Edit Tan Desmond 1966 2017 Burma Superstar addictive recipes from the crossroads of Southeast Asia Leahy Kate Lee John 1971 First ed Berkeley ISBN 9781607749509 OCLC 954719901 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b c d e f g h Duguid Naomi 27 November 2012 Burma Rivers of Flavor Random House of Canada ISBN 978 0 307 36217 9 a b c d e f g h i Aye MiMi 13 June 2019 Mandalay Recipes and Tales from a Burmese Kitchen Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 978 1 4729 5948 5 a b Topich William J Leitich Keith A 2013 The History of Myanmar ABC CLIO ISBN 978 0 313 35724 4 Heiss Mary Lou Heiss Robert J 23 March 2011 The Story of Tea A Cultural History and Drinking Guide Potter Ten Speed Harmony Rodale ISBN 978 1 60774 172 5 Driem George L van 14 January 2019 The Tale of Tea A Comprehensive History of Tea from Prehistoric Times to the Present Day BRILL ISBN 978 90 04 39360 8 a b c d e Driem George L van 14 January 2019 The Tale of Tea A Comprehensive History of Tea from Prehistoric Times to the Present Day BRILL ISBN 978 90 04 39360 8 Seekins Donald M 27 March 2017 Historical Dictionary of Burma Myanmar Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 1 5381 0183 4 Cumo Christopher 25 February 2015 The Ongoing Columbian Exchange Stories of Biological and Economic Transfer in World History Stories of Biological and Economic Transfer in World History ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 61069 796 5 မန တလ က ခန ထ ပ The Voice in Burmese Retrieved 15 November 2019 a b c d Khin Maung Saw Burmese Cuisine Its Unique Style and Changes after British Annexation Retrieved 4 October 2012 Yi YI 1982 Life at the Burmese Court under the Konbaung Kings Burma Historical Research Department Silver Jubilee Publication Meyer Arthur L Jon M Vann 2003 The Appetizer Atlas A World of Small Bites John Wiley and Sons p 276 ISBN 978 0 471 41102 4 a b Myanmar Traditional Foods Myanmar com Archived from the original on 13 October 2012 Retrieved 4 October 2012 Nway Nway Ei 2020 A Comparative Study of the French and Myanmar Table Manners PDF Mandalay University of Foreign Languages Research Journal 11 a b c d e Saw Myat Yin 2011 Culture Shock Myanmar A Survival Guide to Customs and Etiquette Marshall Cavendish Corporation ISBN 9780761458722 Saw Myat Yin 2007 Culture Shock Myanmar Singapore Marshall Cavendish Inc p 133 ISBN 978 0 7614 5410 6 a b Devendra C Devendra C Thomas D Jabbar M A Kudo H Thomas D Jabbar M A Kudo H Improvement of livestock production in crop animal systems in rainfed agro ecological zones of South East Asia ILRI p 33 Gesteland Richard R Georg F Seyk 2002 Marketing across cultures in Asia Copenhagen Business School Press DK p 156 ISBN 978 87 630 0094 9 U Khin Win 1991 A century of rice improvement in Burma International Rice Research Institute pp 27 44 ISBN 978 971 22 0024 3 Meyer Arthur L Jon M Vann 2003 The Appetizer Atlas A World of Small Bites John Wiley and Sons p 276 ISBN 978 0 471 41102 4 Simoons Frederick J 1994 Eat not this flesh food avoidances from prehistory to the present Univ of Wisconsin Press p 120 ISBN 978 0 299 14254 4 Spiro Melford 1982 Buddhism and society a great tradition and its Burmese vicissitudes University of California Press p 46 ISBN 0 520 04672 2 Hardiman John Percy 1900 Gazetteer of Upper Burma and the Shan States Vol 2 Government of Burma pp 93 94 a b Charney Michael 2007 Demographic Growth Agricultural Expansion and Livestock in the Lower Chindwin in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries In Greg Bankoff P 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ရည က လ ပ ငန မ ဈ က က ခ ထ င ရန နည ပည န င င က အက အည ပ မည 7Day News ၇ ရက န စဉ သတင in Burmese 3 April 2017 Archived from the original on 16 January 2021 Retrieved 14 January 2021 a b Tun Ye Tint IRIE Kenji SEIN THAN SHIRATA Kazuto TOYOHARA Hidekazu KIKUCHI Fumio FUJIMAKI Hiroshi 2006 Diverse Utilization of Myanmar Rice with Varied Amylose Contents Japanese Society for Tropical Agriculture doi 10 11248 jsta1957 50 42 Robert Claudia Saw Lwin Pe Win Hutton Wendy 4 February 2014 The Food of Myanmar Authentic Recipes from the Land of the Golden Pagodas Tuttle Publishing ISBN 978 1 4629 1368 8 a b c d Marks Copeland Thein Aung 8 September 1994 The Burmese Kitchen Recipes from the Golden Land Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 9781590772607 ဒ ပ က Biryani Food Magazine Myanmar in Burmese 12 September 2019 Retrieved 25 April 2020 Top 10 Biryani Restaurants in Yangon The Myanmar Times 3 January 2020 Retrieved 25 April 2020 Sofia ထမင ခ ဉ Shan Traditional Rice Cake Food Magazine Myanmar Archived from the 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ijpb14010002 ISSN 2037 0164 Current situation of banana R amp D in Myanmar Advancing banana and plantain R amp D in Asia and the Pacific 13 97 99 November 2004 a b Schweitzer Sharon 7 April 2015 Access to Asia Your Multicultural Guide to Building Trust Inspiring Respect and Creating Long Lasting Business Relationships John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 1 118 91902 6 Drinking and Eating Burmese Tea Matcha Tea com 4 February 2016 Retrieved 13 March 2019 မ န လက ဆ င Yangon Life in Burmese 15 April 2016 Coffee and tea connect daily life of the locals The Myanmar Times 30 January 2018 Retrieved 16 January 2021 I toddy you so The Myanmar Times 25 May 2018 Retrieved 16 January 2021 Shan moonshine maker captures the Kachin spirit Myanmar Mix Retrieved 16 January 2021 a b Chin State MYANMORE Retrieved 16 January 2021 a b Myanmar s Evolving Tea Culture Myanmar Insider 21 June 2018 Archived from the original on 25 June 2018 Retrieved 16 January 2021 The Rich Culture and Tradition of Tea in Myanmar MVA 5 October 2015 Archived from the original on 22 January 2021 Retrieved 16 January 2021 Kraig Bruce Ph D Colleen Taylor Sen 9 September 2013 Street Food around the World An Encyclopedia of Food and Culture An Encyclopedia of Food and Culture ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 59884 955 4 Top 10 Street Foods The Myanmar Times 14 June 2019 Retrieved 16 January 2021 Street vendors to be banned on Yangon s busiest roads The Myanmar Times 17 November 2016 Retrieved 16 January 2021 Smith Forbes Charles James Forbes 1878 British Burma and Its People Being Sketches of Native Manners Customs and Religion J Murray Eyewitness D K 20 September 2016 DK Eyewitness Myanmar Burma Penguin ISBN 978 0 7440 2350 3 Further reading EditMyanmar Business Today Print Edition 27 February 2014 A Roadmap to Building Myanmar into the Food Basket of Asia by David DuByne amp Hishamuddin KohExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cuisine of Myanmar Photo guide to eating in Myanmar Guide to eating vegetarian in Myanmar Mi Mi Khaing Cook and Entertain the Burmese Way Rangoon 1975 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Burmese cuisine amp oldid 1143677787, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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