๐จโ๐ณ Learn from Le Cordon Bleu and save 25% on Premium Membership ๐ฉโ๐ณ
By Naomi Duguid
Published 2012
The stem of a member of the Piper family, Piper interruptum is used as a flavoring in Shan, Palaung, Lao, and northern Thai cooking. The northern Thai and the Lao call it sakhan; the Palaung call it kham. The plant is a liana, a twining vine that needs shade and moisture. The stem (sold as small lengths of wood in markets) is used either as a thin slice of wood that flavors a stew or a broth and is inedible (rather as a bay leaf or a cinnamon stick is included as a flavoring to be set aside rather than chewed) or is finely minced so that it blends into other ingredients.
Access this title via ckbk for one-off payment of the eBook price
ckbk includes hundreds of the world's best cookbooks
150,000+ recipes, with thousands more added each month
Powerful search filters to match your tastes
Create collections and add reviews or private notes to any recipe
Swipe to browse each cookbook from cover-to-cover
Advertisement
Advertisement