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A bas-relief of the 12th/13th century Bayon temple depicting a Khmer outdoor kitchen cooks grilling sang vak and cooking rice and a wild boar and servers carrying away trays of food.
Cambodians hold a deep affection for this dish, often referring to it as the national dish of Cambodia. Nowadays, fish amok is predominantly served in restaurants and reserved for special occasions. Thailand's ho mok is considered a descendant of Khmer amok trei. [17] Nataing (ណាតាំង)
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Num banhchok is featured in a popular Khmer folk legend about an influential revolutionary and scholar Thon Chey who was exiled to China by the Khmer king, where Thon Chey began making num banhchok to make a living. The dish quickly gained popularity among the Chinese and eventually attracted even the attention of the Chinese emperor.
Printable version; In other projects ... Cambodian cuisine (11 C, 43 P) Cameroonian cuisine (1 C, 17 P) ... National dish; A. Cuisine of Akrotiri and Dhekelia; C ...
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Nowadays, the Teochew kway teow has become a popular dish in Cambodia, where it is eaten for breakfast, lunch and dinner or as a snack and often flavoured with lime, chili, fish sauce, and palm sugar. [5] Other Cambodian Chinese dishes include lort cha, [6] babor, [7] bai cha, [8] chai yor, [9] and num kroch. [10]
The base of the soup is made with chicken or fish stock and lemongrass or green kroeung. [2] It consists of cut vegetables (such as taro, winter melon, pumpkin, and luffa), mushrooms, [3] and freshwater fish (such as bream, pike or brown trout), coconut blossom flavoured with palm sugar, fish sauce, and rice powder, and garnished with fresh herbs (such as climbing wattle, wild asparagus ...