List of ingredients in Burmese cuisine
Pa-O women selling vegetables
Burmese cuisine utilizes a wide array of vegetables and fruits. Due to influences from India and China, most Burmese dishes use a much wider variety of ingredients than the Indian or Chinese cuisines.
Ingredients used in Burmese dishes are often fresh. Many fruits are used in conjunction with vegetables in many dishes. The Burmese eat a great variety of vegetables and fruits, and all kinds of meat.
List
The following is the list of ingredients in Burmese cuisine. Burmese names are given in parentheses.
|
|
- pork (wet tha [weʔ θa])
- prawns and shrimp (ba zun)
- pumpkin (shway hpa yon thee)
- dried fermented bean cake (pè bouk)
- dried fish (nga chauk [ŋa tʃʰauʔ])
- dried shrimp (ba zun jauk [bə zũ dʒauʔ])
- rice flour (hsan hmohnt [sʰã m̥oũʔ])
- ridged gourd (hka wè thee)
- Rohu (Nga gyin)
- roselle leaves (chin baung ywet [tʃʰĩ maũ jweʔ])
- salted fish (nga hsa ne or nga pi gaung)
- sambar (hsat tha)
- santol (Tit to Thi)
- sea bass (ka kadit)
- sesame seeds (hnan [n̥ã])
- sesame oil (hnan zi [n̥ã sʰi])
- sesbania grandiflora (pauk pan pyu)
- shrimp paste, belacan (hmyin nga pi)
- snake gourd (pè lin mwe)
- sour fermented bamboo shoot (hmyit chin)
- sour fermented fish, pressed (nga chin)
- sour fermented green mango, pressed (tha yet chin)
- sour fermented shrimp, pressed (ba zun jin)
- spring onions (kyet thun meik [tʃʰeʔ tũ meiʔ])
- sweet basil (pin zayn)
- tamarind (majee thee [ma dʒi θi]),green as well as ripe
- tamarind leaves (majee ywet)
- taro corm (payn U)
- taro shoot (payn swe)
- tindora (kinn mon thee)
- tomatoes (hka yan jin thee [kʰa jã dzĩ θi])
- turmeric (sa nwin [sʰə nwĩ])
- urad dal, black lentil (mat pè)
- water spinach (ga zun ywet)
- winged bean (pè saun yah)
- winter melon (kyauk hpa yon thee)
|
See also