‘Canh bon’ – food delight of Thái ethnic people in Vietnam's northwest region

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(VOVworld) – Thái ethnic people have long grown the ingredients used to make traditional specialties like ‘canh bon’, a soup made from water-taro.

(VOVworld) – Thái ethnic people have long grown the ingredients used to make traditional specialties like ‘canh bon’, a soup made from water-taro.

Though ‘canh bon’ soup is made of simple ingredients, making it requires a lot of time and attention to detail.

‘Canh bon’ – food delight of Thái ethnic people in Vietnam's northwest region - ảnh 1
Thai women are preparing for welcoming a New Year festival.

 

In the Thái villages of Sơn La province, often near the source of a stream, grow ‘bon’ trees, also called water-taro, which provide the soup's main ingredient, sweet water taro. The bark of the best trees, the ones with violet spots on the leaves, is peeled off and steeped in water to remove the resin.

Other ingredients of canh bon include fish sauce, salt, sodium glutamate, dill, 'mắc khén’ - a kind of forest peppercorn with a distinctive aroma - and ox-hide or buffalo-hide.  

Preparation of the firewood is very important, according to Lường thị Quân of Tò Lọ hamlet in Sơn La city. She noted that “it’s forbidden to add more firewood or change the firewood while cooking. Otherwise the soup will be inedible.”

Once the ox-hide or buffalo-hide is stewed, the prepared ‘bon’ tree bark is added and cooked for an additional 15 minutes. Then assorted vegetables, herbs, wild egg-plants, and ‘mắc khén’ pepper are added to the broth.

When the vegetables are done, a little sticky rice powder is added to thicken the broth. Ms. Quân said that “to make delicious ‘canh bon’, you must prepare all the necessary spices like‘mắc khén’ pepper and garlic, and the various herbs and vegetables.”

In the past visitors to Thái houses were never invited to eat ‘canh bon’ because it’s so difficult to make. And according to Thai custom, ‘canh bon’ was not prepared for ancestor worship.

But now ‘canh bon’ has become a specialty of the Thái ethnic group that is served at daily family meals, at parties, and in restaurants.

Nguyễn Thị Hồng, a visitor from Hanoi who has tried the dish, said that “it's very delicious. It has the bitterness of wild egg-plant and the aroma of various herbs.”

On winter days, visitors are warmed by hot ‘canh bon’ soup served by the host family and savor the sweet bitterness of this unique specialty of Vietnam’s northwestern region.

 

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