Pundits say that the world is at the dawn of a New Golden Age of travel. Growing affluence and leisure of the middle class not only in Europe but also in Asia, combined to spur the travel itch, thus opening further new frontiers for travel.
Jet-set tourists, tired of the familiar venues,
stereotyped bland food, tend to look for something out-of-the way,
something mystique and magical, somewhere off the beaten track, quiet
paradises so far seldomly frequented, offering some monetary change of
perspective. The search is ahead to discover the unexpected, and enjoy
in ecstasy the unfolding panorama of a new experience.
Such is our land that has so much to offer in this
dawn of tourism, endless stretch of green forests, a rural community of
simple people, exotic sights, and exotic food to excite the inquiring
palate.
The itinerary of a visiting traveller to Myanmar
will never be deemed complete if he or she has not tested the ubiquitous
Mohingar or Latphet (pickled tea leaves) or sweetmeats to satisfy the
sweet tooth, to name but some of the commonly known delectable
delicacies Myanmar has to offer. And that is the theme of this article.
Mohingar is typically synonymous with Myanmar as is
pizza to Italy, hot-dog to USA, tea to the British, sukiyaki to the
Japanese, pau to the Chinese and chapati to the Indians. Verily it is an
all-time favorite, from breakfast, through lunch to high teatime and
even stretching to supper. You can find it everywhere, in reputable food
centres, in markets, school canteens, pavement stalls. Itinerant
sellers traverse through streets in small push carts, or balanced on the
head in a basket by the womenfolk.
Mohingar is indeed Myanmar's fastfood because it can
be relished instantly without much ado pleasing and tasty. Its food
value is rich in protein carbohydrates, vitamins, minerals etc. Its
recipe is also simple, easy to prepare with ingredients within reach of
every budget both in ascending or descending order.
A general run-of-the-mill recipe will include the
following ingredients: rice noodles, fish (fresh water or marine, ) fish
or prawn sause, a small measure of salted fish, lemon grass, tender
banana stems, ginger, garlic, pepper, onion, turmeric powder, rice
flour, dahl (Indian bean) powder, dried chilli powder, cooking oil.
The method of cooking the broth differs with each
region and taste of the locality. This fish broth is taken with rice
noodles and only the such composition fittingly earns the name Mohingar.
The rice noodles to go with mohingar is prepared by a special process,
and carry a whiff of mild fermentation. Fresh slabs of noodles are also
available, which has to be sliced to cater to individual demands.
Laying a mohingar table calls for elaborate
preparation. The cooked broth is put in shining aluminum or steel
receptacle and placed on open fire to keep it boiling because mohingar
is served steaming hot to bring forth the correct flavour and taste. And
mohingar is taken with other accompanying side dishes to make it a
feast fit for a king, for in a market economy customer is king,
naturally. Thus on the table are spread colourful arrays of food
adornments such as fried sliced gourd with tempura (a favourite with
Myanmars as french fries are to the Westerners), fried onions, fried
fish cakes sliced to size, sliced hard-boiled eggs etc. Alongside with
these dishes are laid a dish of dried chilli for those who like it hot,
slices of fresh lemon to squeeze into the preparation for those who like
the sweet-and-sour flavour, chopped green coriander leaves. All these
ingredients are mixed into the piece de resistance and alors, there's
none equal to this exciting delicacy of pure Myanmar origin.
Each region, each town, even each reputable shop has
its own secret recipe to make it distinct and attract clients. some add
coconut milk to heighten aroma and flavour, but such preparation are
frowned upon by the senior clients as it adversely tend to raise blood
pressure to dizzy heights. The most common species of fresh-water fish
that go into Mohingar broth are carp, catfish, butterfish etc to name
some.
The monhingar along the coastal regions use marine
fish. Deltaic towns in the numerous lakes called 'inns' meaning large
expanse of water catchment where fish breed. The broth is prepared with a
liberal mix of fish fresh from the latest catch. In Upper Myanmar
region to the north, customers prefer thick broth and so it is an
overtone of dahl flour.
The Rakhine Mohingar is also famours for its
distinct blend. It includes a very liberal mix of hot chiller pepper,
which literally burns your tongue and palate if you are caught unawares.
So Rakhine Mohingar is popularly known by the euphemism "Hot palate,
hot tongue concoction". ( Aap- lYap )
So, this, in essence is the gourmet's delectable
delight, from the sophisticated to the plebian, from the high-and-mighty
to the humble man-in-the-street, Myanmar' s Mohingar, typicaly native,
equal to none.
Original Link ; http://www.myanmars.net/myanmar-food/mohingar.htm
| |
၀ါးခယ္မၿမိဳ.ေလး၏ အၿဖစ္အပ်က္ ၊အေႀကာင္းအရာ ၊သမိုင္းမ်ားကို ေလ.လာသိရွိနိဳင္ေစရန္ ၊ ဂုဏ္ယူနိဳင္ေစရန္ ရွာေဖြစုေဆာင္း တင္ၿပထားၿခင္းၿဖစ္ၿပီး အၿခား စိတ္၀င္စားဖြယ္ ၊ ဗဟုသုတ ရဖြယ္ရာမ်ား ကိုဖတ္ရွုနိဳင္ရန္အတြက္လည္းေကာင္း ၊ဤ ဘေလာ.မွတစ္ဆင္. အၿခားဘေလာ.မ်ား သတင္း႒ာနမ်ားကို အလြယ္တကူသြားေရာက္ေလ.လာနိဳင္ရန္အတြက္လည္းေကာင္း တရား၀င္ ၿမဴနီစပယ္ ၿမိဳ.အၿဖစ္ရပ္တည္ခြင္.ရသည္.ၿမိဳ.ေလး၏ ၁၀၆ ႏွစ္ၿပည္.ေမြးေန. ၿဖစ္ေသာ၁-၁၀-၂၀၁၂ တြင္၀ါးခယ္မ ဘေလာ.ကို စတင္ဖြဲ.တည္ၿပိး ၁၂ ရက္ ၁၂ လ ၂၀၁၂ တြင္ အၿပီးသတ္လႊင္.တင္သည္
No comments:
Post a Comment