A Taste of Sticky Rice, Laos’ National Dish
One cannot travel to the Southeast Asian country without many meals of sticky rice, the versatile staple of Laotian cuisine
- By Mike Ives
- Smithsonian.com, February 01, 2011, Subscribe
Luck was losing patience, and his stomach was grumbling like the diesel engine of the bus transporting him to northern Laos. He needed to eat sticky rice, he said, so badly!
He checked his cellphone: No service. Slumping into his seat, he looked out the windows — but it was mid-November in the Lao People’s Democratic Republic, and in field after field, Laotian farmers were harvesting sticky rice and burning the discarded husks for fertilizer. Luck sighed. The smoky air carried a sweet, ricey aroma.
It was the first day of a six-day, northbound journey from Vientiane, the tranquil capital, to a remote village near the Laos-China border. Luck — short for Vilayluck Onphanmany — is my 23-year-old Laotian friend and translator whom I’d met on my first of three previous trips to the landlocked Southeast Asian country. He was assisting a gastronomic investigation: a friend and I were on a mission to learn the secrets of sticky rice, the mainstay of Laotian cuisine, and in the process, to eat as much of it as possible.
When our bus rattled into a dusty market, a group of women crowded the windows. “Ao khao bor?” they called (“Do you want sticky rice?”). Luck snapped to attention and called for two bags — one for me and my traveling companion, and one for himself. We ate with our hands, Laotian-style. Luck finished his portion before the bus started rolling.
“I feel better!” he said, and promptly dozed off. Other passengers were either eating sticky rice or, like Luck, sleeping it off.
What explains the national love of sticky rice? Many Laotians laughed when I asked them. Sticky rice is what their grandparents and great-grandparents ate, they said. Perhaps they were caught off guard by my question: like baguettes in France and sushi in Japan, sticky rice is so ingrained in Laos’ culinary heritage that most Laotians don’t think about it in isolation.
Sticky, or “glutinous,” rice has been growing in mainland Southeast Asia for at least 4,000 years. Historians debate whether ancient farmers grew sticky rice because it was suited to local growing conditions or because they liked its taste and chewy texture. What’s clear is that, by the 18th century, sticky rice had been largely replaced across the region by varieties of non-glutinous rice, a.k.a. “white rice.”
But sticky rice is still the primary staple in Laos parts of the five countries bordering it: China, Myanmar, Thailand, Cambodia and Vietnam. In Laos, slightly larger in area than Utah, per-capita sticky rice consumption is the highest on earth at more than 345 pounds per year. The average American, by contrast, eats less than 20 pounds of rice annually, according to the United States Drug Administration.
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Comments (4)
This story is so cool :)
Posted by Mr. Luck on February 9,2011 | 03:00 AM
Mr Luck is not a translator unless he's translating written words. He's an interpretor if he's interpreting spoken words. Please have your writers/editors use correct language.
Posted by miskito on February 4,2011 | 10:29 AM
My son lived and studied in Hanoi, Vietnam for 2 and a half years. Sticky rice was one of his favorite treats, often made especially for him by Vietnamese friends. When I visited, these same friends had us over for a fabulous meal of hot pot, and as we left we were both handed a "package" of sticky rice tied in a banana leaf. Delicious!
Posted by Cheri Cabot on February 3,2011 | 11:31 PM
Sticky rice treats are my madeleines. My mom makes a killer eight treasure rice - a mass of sticky rice steamed with rock candy, dates, lotus nuts, raisins, almonds and whatever other "treasures" are one hand (though they rarely add up to eight, the name's alliterative). Or wrapped in long, pointy tetrahedrons of leaves, with sausage or red bean paste in the middle. This is my grandma's specialty, and you will never find sticky rice wrapped so meticulously as hers in some store. Technically, they're made for Duanwujie, to keep the fishes from eating a drowned king, we were told, but sometimes she'd just be in the mood for them. And of course, my personal favorite, sticky rice cake, make with sticky rice flour, sugar, and studded with walnuts. Chewy, sweet, nutty, and absolutely not to be traded away at the cafeteria table. This is an article that begs for recipes.
Posted by SC on February 2,2011 | 09:22 AM