The diversity of Asian street food


STREET food in Asia is a varied fare that delights the palate and comes cheaply. It is colourful, tasty and varied, sometimes sharp, saucy or spicy.

There is something for those with a sweet tooth, or to suit those looking for more of a savoury sensation. Drinks and snacks and full meals.

Street food is the original traditional finger-and-fast food, with a long tradition of cuisine made with fresh local ingredients, on-the-spot, while-you-watch cooking, and at an affordable price.

Some people forsake a kitchen and survive on street food while others supplement their household regime with the varied fare.

Universally, some dishes have caught the world’s attention and appear in almost everyone’s food vocabulary. They also form an important part of a modern travel experience, and eating the local food is an essential element in every tourist trip to a far-off place.

In Thailand, among best known and loved is the stir-fried noodle dish pad Thai, in Hong Kong, it is deep fried curry fish balls, while red bean cakes reign in Taiwan and a bowl of pho noodle soup is supreme in Vietnam, vegetarian masala thosai, pav bhaji, panipuris (fried puris) and sweet snack malai kulfi or frozen dairy dessert are among traditional favourites in India.

Meat figures in the Philippines and take-away meat snacks and whole roasted suckling pigs are popular. Sweet traditional yomari or Nepalese steamed dumplings are well loved in Nepal and Cambodia consumes bowls of steaming snails hand collected by farmers in the countryside to Phnom Penh city.

Scorpions and crickets are among the protein-rich insects deep-fried in oil until crunchy sprinkled with lemongrass slivers and chili that are popularly sold from street vendors carts across Thailand.

And betel quids, known as kunya, are popular in Myanmar, made of tobacco placed into the mouth to suck and chew. Baozi or Chinese steamed meat buns are a breakfast favourite in China.

Singapore and Malaysia feature many food hawker centres which offer a variety of traditional food tastes and open eating. S

Singapore said it will be nominating its hawker culture, comprising more than 6,000 for  Unesco’s Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity.

But the news has angered some Malaysians, as both nations share a long street food culture heritage with similar dishes creating a rivalry over the origins of the dishes and who offers the most delicious. – November 22, 2018.


Sign up or sign in here to comment.


Comments


  • Nasi lemak is not wrapped in pandan leave. They're wrapped in banana leaf.

    Posted 7 years ago by Léon Moch · Reply