Monday, January 15, 2007

Prahok is the taste of Cambodia. If there is no prahok, we are not Cambodians. Prahok is the Khmer identity.

Photo: AFP
Monday January 15, 2007
Got fish? Cambodians kick off a smelly annual ritual with gusto

CHRANG CHAMRES, Cambodia (AFP) - The pungent smell of rotting seafood hangs heavily in the air as Cambodians crowd the country's riverbanks, gutting and crushing finger-sized fish by the tonne as the annual frenzy of making prahok, fermented fish paste, gets underway.

With a deft flick of his knife, Yos Kim slowly works through the 300 kilograms (660 pounds) of tiny fish piled high around him and his family on the banks of Cambodia's Tonle Sap river, slicing off their heads while his children crush their bodies underfoot in woven baskets.

The grey pulp will be set out to dry for 24 hours before being salted down and packed into bags or plastic jars to sit for weeks, if not months, to ferment.

The result is a spicy pungent mash that, while challenging the senses of even the most adventurous foreigner, is considered by Cambodians to be the soul of their rich culinary culture.

"Prahok is the taste of Cambodia. If there is no prahok, we are not Cambodians. Prahok is the Khmer identity," says Nao Thouk, director of the agriculture ministry's fisheries department.

"It is like butter or cheese for Westerners," he adds, explaining that some 70,000 to 80,000 tonnes of prahok are produced each year between December and March, when thousands swarm to the rivers.

Farmers from outlying provinces will travel vast distances to trade rice for the fish paste, which is one of the most important sources of protein for Cambodians in the countryside, where simple meals of prahok and rice are common.

"Prahok is equal in value to rice. Farmers would face a hard time living without it," says Yos Kim, who traveled from his home in Prey Veng province, bordering Vietnam, for this year's prahok season.

Prahok is also used as an ingredient in soups or as a condiment, lending its unique flavour to a wide variety of Khmer dishes.

"It's so important for our daily lives -- we use it in every soup," says Dim Eang, her hands deep inside a pile of raw fish which she is mixing with salt.

In her home village, some four hours from the capital Phnom Penh, the 52-year-old farmer says she will trade 80 kilograms (175 pounds) of the paste for rice while keeping 20 kilograms for her family.

"It's our most necessary and best-liked food," she says, as small boats loaded to the gunwales bring their silvery catch to the riverbank, where hundreds of people are waiting to turn the fish into paste.

Among them is Los Mann, who is trying to hawk his services with a machine he guarantees will take some of the back-breaking work out of stomping tonnes of fish to mash.

"Hundreds of people have brought me their fresh fish," he says, shouting over the metallic clacking of his contraption, which resembles a crude blender that pummels the fish into pulp and spits them out onto a wire mesh belt through which the heads fall.

"It saves time and you don't have to step on them," he says.

But while Los Mann and scores of others operating similar machines up and down the river say they cannot keep up with demand, other fisherman are grumbling that their prahok catches have greatly diminished this year.

"There are less fish than last year," says one owner of a fishing concession on the river, without saying how many tons of the tiny fish he had managed to scoop out of the water this year.

Others complain that the price of prahok fish has almost doubled this year to roughly 13 US cents a kilo -- threatening to put prahok out of reach for many of those who rely on it the most to supplement their meager diets.

"I had planned to make 100 kilograms of prahok, but now I can only make half that," says Trang Oeun as she prepares to leave the riverbank littered with tens of thousands of fly-blackened fish heads.

8 comments:

Anonymous said...

Prahok is a form of fermented food which promoted many good bacteria in the intestine tract which help absorb nutrient from food and keep out toxic from the food.

Scientists are begining to trace many of the human sickness back to digestive system and the intestinal tract.

Human tend to get sick when bad bacteria outnumber the good bacteria!!!

Anonymous said...

I understood the benefit of local faunas in complex organisms such as ourselves, but I never like Prohok, or anything food smells for that matter, including bad cheese. Don't get me wrong, I love most Khmer cusine, because my wife's family own a restaurant in Cambodia. However, prohok is not my cup of tea.

Anonymous said...

That's why KHMER PEOPLE SMELL STING for miles.

Anonymous said...

9:08 your mother smell sting that why you carry it to your head. you stingy head, and your farther is stupid or his thing is smelling to!

You neukmam brain!

Anonymous said...

To 9:08 PM

Do you think so? What about your mouth? Don't your mouth smell stink every morning when you woke up from sleep?

You need to understand that many of personal hygiene consumer products sell in Cambodia are fake! I would say 99% of Cambodian toothpaste are imported from Thailane! I had the opprotunity to send high quality toothpaste from United States and all the Cambodian people who used it and they prefer to use the one made in the U.S.A.! But the toothpaste made in U.S.A cost about $4.00 a tube and how can these dirt people Cambodian afford it??? These Cambodian people work for $1 aday and in a month they make about $30 to 40 dollars! I had heard that garment workers are now getting $45 dollars a month!

So when people are too poor and too dirty and they don't give a fuck about anything! They just want to survive and who care about clean mouth which lead to good health!!!

I can't blame these Cambodian people because AH HUN SEN Vietcong slave want Cambodian people to be like this!!!!

Cambodia need another blood bath to make everthing all clean!!!

Anonymous said...

Sure, if you get into your rat's
hole, I am sure your dream will
come true, but never out here.

Anonymous said...

To 1:49 PM

Are you talking about rat hole or rabbit hole? Oh well! It doesn't matter because I make you go first anyway and If you don't I am going to kick your ass!ahahahhahahahhaha

Anonymous said...

hahahaha... pour ah youn and ah khnom youn sot tae pour ah bat psa.
vea niyiey only rat hole cos his hole is rat hole. hahahahah