"Potato consumption in Bhutan was low up to the 1970s. In the early 70s, when farmers started growing potato for export, they were generally reluctant to consume the tuber. Eating potato as a staple was socially and culturally unacceptable as many Bhutanese believed that potatoes caused problems of the lower abdomen, vomiting, constipation and diarrhea. Similarly, in the 19th century ethnographical descriptions of Tibet, potato consumption was said to be " confined to the poorer classes" ( Rockhill 1891). Over the last four decades, the status of potato as a food or vegetable has changed tremendously. Today unlike in the 70s , potato is widely eaten as a vegetable and sometimes even as a staple food."
“To Zowa Sho” means “Come eat!” in Dzongkha the official language of Bhutan. This simple invitation encapsulates what this blog hopes to do because it implies that you are not eating alone, that eating is an inherently communal act.
Sunday, April 24, 2016
Reading Notes:How "typical" is Kewa Datsi?
Frequently when Bhutanese live outside Bhutan are asked to cook a "typical" Bhutanese meal they will whip up Kewa Datsi- a stew-like dish with potatoes, chilli and cheese. However research on history of potato in Bhutan suggests that potato might be a fairly new "typical" Bhutanese food. The below extract comes from the " The Potato in Bhutan" ( 2008) by Walter Roder, Karma Nidup and Ganesh B. Chettri.
Saturday, April 9, 2016
Reading Notes: Bhutanese Eating Etiquette
From: Tshering C Dorji and Rinchen Dorji (2005) "Living the Bhutanese Way" DSB Publications, Thimphu
Under the Driglam Choesum or Za Cha Do(e) Sum, a code of standard practices was framed, based on three kinds of human activity: eating, doing things and walking. It is said that no matter how rich a person is, he should never eat sleeping and no matter how poor a person is, he should not eat standing. Therefore, a person eats sitting properly.
A person can only eat that amount of food which can be held within two fingers and a thumb of the right hand. He is expected to keep the drinks on the left side and the solid things to the right. A person should not pile bones in front or behind. The person keeps them inside his hemcho ( the pouch). Jokes are told about a person who carried all the bones in his pouch and ate peacefully outside without having to fear an imposition of any discipline.
A person is expected to eat his food with closed mouth and not make much noise while eating. He is expected not to talk which he has food in his mouth.
Bhutanese in the villages usually crush the cereal into small balls and eat. The more compact the cereal ball, the more filling of the stomach, so they don't get hungry soon. Stories are being said that in the olden days the people judged a person whether he could work or not from the amount of breakfast he ate. If the person ate a smaller amount of breakfast, the person was regarded as a weakling.
Sunday, April 3, 2016
Bitter Flowers
My sister recently traveled to the south of Bhutan for work and came back with low-land treats including lots of bananas and some of the flowers you see on the left. Yes, the flowers are to eat! In Dzongkha we call them bashika. I am not sure of what they would be called in English but the scientific name for the shrub that these flowers grow on is Adhatoda vasica. The flowers are collected from the wild and was were fact among the many plants documented in a survey of wild and edible plants in Bhutan. Bhutanese believe that the bitter flowers have medicinal properties.
The same plant is in fact part of the range of plants used in traditional Indian medicine but instead of the flowers they use the leaves which are either brewed into a tea or ground into a paste.
According to the survey of wild and edible plants there are several ways in which the flowers can be prepared including with meat, stir-fried or made into a datshi with chili and cheese. Our house-keeper, Yeshi made a datshi out of the flowers for lunch yesterday.
She began by boiling the flowers on our gas stove, she explained that this would clean the flowers as well as remove some of the bitterness. Below is the pot of flowers after they were boiled. Yeshi points out how brown the water has become.
Next the flowers were drained and placed in a bowl with fresh water. Yeshi then scooped out the flowers and pressed out the water by hand.
This is what the boiled, drained and hand strained flowers looked like.
Then Yeshi had to painstakingly clean the flowers by hand, removing any remaining dirt as well as a large green, very boiled caterpillar. ( Poor guy!)
Afterwards she added the typical ingredients for a datshi. Chili, salt , a little bit of vegetable oil and water. The cheese is added after the dish is almost cooked. In this case we were out of Bhutanese cheese, so Yeshi used the processed Indian cheese that is becoming the standard in many Bhutanese kitchens.
And here we have the finished product, ready to eat.The texture of the flowers was a little slimy but not unpleasant and the taste was less bitter than I remember. Its possible that they were boiled a little too zealously removing too much bitterness.
For more on survey of wild and edible Bhutanese plants:
Kinlay Tshering ( 2012 “ Edible and Wild Plants of Bhutan and their contribution to food and nutritionsecurity” Horticulture Division, Department of
Agriculture Ministry of Agriculture & Forests, Royal Government of Bhutan
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