Burmese fritters
Course | Breakfast, snack (mont) |
---|---|
Place of origin | Myanmar (Burma) |
Region or state | Southeast Asia |
Associated national cuisine | Burmese |
Main ingredients | Various |
Similar dishes | Vada, tempura, pakora, okoy, pholourie |
Burmese fritters (Burmese: အကြော်; pronounced [ʔət͡ɕɔ̀]; known as a-kyaw in Burmese) are traditional fritters consisting of vegetables or seafood that have been battered and deep-fried. Assorted fritters are called a-kyaw-sone (Burmese: အကြော်စုံ). Burmese fritters are generally savory, and often use beans and pulses, similar to South Asian vada.
The fritters are eaten mainly at breakfast or as a snack at teatime, served at tea shops and hawker stands alike.[1] They are typically served as standalone snacks dipped in a sour-sweet tamarind-based sauce, or as toppings for common Burmese dishes. Gourd, chickpea and onion fritters are cut into small parts and eaten with mohinga, Myanmar's national dish. These fritters are also eaten with kauk hnyin baung rice and with a Burmese green sauce called chin-saw-gar (ချဉ်စော်ကား) or a-chin-yay (အချဉ်ရည်). Depending on the fritter hawker, the sauce is made from chili sauce diluted with vinegar, water, cilantro, finely diced tomatoes, garlic and onions.
Variations[]
Diced onions, chickpea, potatoes, a variety of leafy vegetables, brown bean paste, Burmese tofu, chayote, banana and crackling are other popular fritter ingredients. Typical Burmese fritters include:
- Bazun khwet kyaw (ပုစွန်ခွက်ကြော်) - fritters made of bean sprouts and prawns, similar to Filipino okoy[2]
- Kawpyan kyaw (ကော်ပြန့်ကြော်) - fried popiah filled with vegetables such as jicama, carrots, and bean sprouts[3]
- Mandalay pe kyaw (မန္တလေးပဲကြော်) - kidney bean fritters
- Mat pe kyaw (မတ်ပဲကြော်) or Mandalay baya kyaw (မန္တလေးဗယာကြော်) - black gram fritters, similar to South Indian medu vada[4]
- Mont kat kyaw (မုန့်ကပ်ကြော်) - vegetable fritters battered in rice flour[5]
- Mont hsi kyaw (မုန့်ဆီကြော်) - fried pancake with jaggery slices[5]
- Ngaphe kyaw (ငါးဖယ်ကြော်) - deep-fried fishcakes made from bronze featherback flesh
- Ngapyaw kyaw (ငှက်ပျောကြော်) - banana fritters, made only with overripe bananas with no added sugar or honey
- Pe kyaw (ပဲကြော်) - fried split pea crackers that traditionally garnish mohinga
- Pyaungbu kyaw (ပြောင်းဖူးကြော်) - corn fritters similar to Indonesian bakwang jagung[6]
- Samuza (စမူဆာ) - deep-fried potato dumplings
- Tohu kyaw (တိုဟူးကြော်) - Burmese tofu fritters
- Yangon baya kyaw (ရန်ကုန်ဗယာကြော်) - yellow split pea fritters, similar to pakora, falafel and pholourie[4][7]
- Yikyakway (အီကြာကွေး) - deep-fried Chinese crullers
References[]
- ^ Bush, Austin. "10 foods to try in Myanmar -- from tea leaf salad to Shan-style rice". CNN. Retrieved 2020-05-31.
- ^ "ပုစွန်ခွက်ကြော်". Food Magazine Myanmar. Retrieved 2019-11-13.
- ^ "လူကြိုက်များတဲ့ ကော်ပြန့်ကြော်လေး ကြော်စားရအောင်". MyFood Myanmar (in Burmese). 2018-08-23. Retrieved 2021-11-03.
- ^ a b Aye, MiMi (2019-06-13). Mandalay: Recipes and Tales from a Burmese Kitchen. Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 9781472959485.
- ^ 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
- ^ Aurora (2019-09-29). "ချိုဆိမ့်ဆိမ့်အရသာလေးနဲ့ အကြိုက်တွေ့ကြမယ့် ချိစ်ပြောင်းဖူးကြော်". ဧရာဝတီ (in Burmese). Retrieved 2021-11-03.
- ^ Marks, C.; Thein, A. (1994). The Burmese Kitchen: Recipes from the Golden Land. M. Evans. p. 35. ISBN 978-1-59077-260-7. Retrieved November 5, 2016.
See also[]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Burmese fritters. |
- Burmese cuisine
- Fritters
- Southeast Asian cuisine stubs
- Myanmar culture stubs
- Burmese cuisine
- Deep fried foods