Amok (dish)
Amok trei – Khmer fish amok | |
Type | Curry |
---|---|
Place of origin | Cambodia |
Main ingredients | Curry, banana leaves |
Cookbook: Amok Media: Amok |
In South-East Asian cuisine, "mok", "amok" or "ho mok" refers to the process of steam cooking a curry in banana leaves, or to the resulting dish. Thick coconut cream and galangal are classic ingredients, added to a wide range of possible kinds of leaves and staple ingredients. Amok is a major national culinary tradition in Cambodia, and also popular in Laos and Thailand. The Thai version uses the same Thai curry paste as red curry.[1][2] Amok is thick soup cooked with fish, meat, vegetables,eggs and coconut milk. It is a common dish served at restaurants. The most common types of amok are made with fish, beef, or chicken as the main proteins. Amok can also be eaten with rice.[3][4]
The base dish or process is locally referred to as:
A wide variety of ingredients can be used to prepare amok dishes. The main ingredient will usually give its name to the dish:
- fish - ហហ្មុកត្រី [haː mok trəj] in Khmer; ຫມົກປາ [mók paː] in Laotian; ห่อหมกปลา [hɔ̀ː mòk plaː] in Thai
- tofu
- bamboo shoots - ຫມົກຫນໍ່ໄມ້ [mók nɔ̄ː mâj] in Laotian (often with minced meat inside)
- chicken
- eggs - ຫມົກໄຂ່ [kʰāj] (often with minced meat inside)
- algae - as in the Laotian ຫມົກໄຄ [mók kʰáj] (with Mekong weed).
See also
- Amok trey, a specific Khmer recipe of this dish
- Homok, Thai version and pronunciation of almost identical dish
- Otak-otak, similar fish dumpling, a Nyonya Peranakan cuisine common in Malaysia, Singapore and Indonesia
- Pepes, similar Indonesian dish wrapped in banana leaf
- Botok, similar Indonesian Javanese dish wrapped in banana leaf
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Amok (dish). |
- ↑ "Thai Steamed Curried Fish [Haw Mok Pla]". Retrieved 30 May 2014.
- ↑ Leela (November 16, 2010). "Hor Mok (ห่อหมก) – Thai Curried Fish Custard and The Principles of Thai Cookery by Chef McDang". Retrieved 30 May 2014.
- ↑ "Fish Amok, Cambodia's National Dish". Asia Society.
- ↑ "Cambodian Fish Amok". the city kitchen.