Newar cuisine
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Newa cuisine/नेवा: नसा (also referred to as Newari cuisine) is a distinctive subset of Nepalese cuisine that has developed over centuries among the Newars of Nepal Mandal in Nepal.[1] Newa cuisine is the most celebrated food variety in the country and consists of over 500 dishes. It is more elaborate than most Nepalese cuisines because the Kathmandu Valley has exceptionally fertile alluvial soil and enough wealthy households to make growing produce more profitable than cultivating rice and other staples.
Food is an integral part of Newar culture. Different kinds of foods are prepared for different occasions, considering the climate and nutritional needs of the body. Newars are renowned for their sumptuous feasting.[2] Dishes served during feasts and festivals have symbolic significance.
Newa cuisine is renowned for its extraordinary variety and is recognized as one of the oldest food cultures in South Asia. Its rich diversity reflects not only the daily consumption patterns but also adapts to seasonal changes, festivals, rituals, and regional variations.
Daily meals in Newa cuisine are commonly referred to as "Jā Neu/जा नेउ" or "Newa Thali" (also known as "Newa Jā Bhu/जा भु"). These meals typically consist of Taichin rice, lentil soup, a variety of green vegetables, assorted vegetable dishes, and meat items, all complemented by an array of pickles. The traditional meal structure is distinctly categorized: the morning meal is known as "Jyaana/ज्या:न," the afternoon meal is called "Baji/ बजी," and the evening meal is referred to as "Beli/बेली." This organized approach to meals underscores the richness and adaptability of Newa cuisine, making it both nutritious and flavorful, and showcasing the deep cultural significance embedded in each dish.
Lunch and dinner
[edit]- Jā (boiled rice)
Meat dishes
[edit]- Choila (ground buffalo meat)
- Pālulā (buffalo meat and ginger curry)
- Senlāmu (raw ground buffalo liver seasoned with spices)
Vegetable dishes
[edit]- Tarkāri (vegetable curry)
- Wāunchā (green vegetables)
- Tukan:chā
- Palācha
- Shākechā
- Chōlechā
Soups
[edit]- Ken (lentil soup)
- Simi (beans)
- Mi (fenugreek)
- Aai ka (leftover rice after preparing rice beer)
- Choohon (tama in Nepali) (bamboo shoot)
Relishes
[edit]- losa (relish)
Lunch
[edit]- Baji (beaten rice)
- Chatānmari (rice flour crepe)
- Chhusyā (parched wheat)
- Gophuki (puffed rice)
- Gwaramari (deep-fried dough)
- Hājā (steamed rice)
- Jākimari (rice flour pancake)
- Kani (popcorn)
- Kheyn wo (fried egg)
- Musyā (roasted soybean)
- Sukulā (dried meat)
- Wo (fried lentil cake)
- Bara (fried lentil cake with a hole like a donut)
Feast foods
[edit]Meat dishes
[edit]- Dāyekālā (buffalo meat curry)
- Dugulā (goat meat curry)
- Heynlā (duck curry)
- Bandella (wild boar meat)
- Changrala (mountain goat meat)
- Khasilā (gelded goat meat)
- Nyā (fish curry)
- Sanya (small fish)
- Chohi (steamed buffalo blood)
- Janlā (marinated diced with skin raw meat)
- Kachilā (marinated raw minced buffalo meat)
- Khāyālā (chicken curry)
- Me (buffalo tongue boiled, sliced and fried)
- Pangra
- Nhyapu (brains boiled, sliced and fried)
- Nyāpukā (fried fish)
- Pukālā (fried meat intestine, e.g. liver, heart etc.)
- Sanyā-khunā (spicy jellied fish soup)
- Sapu mhichā (leaf tripe bag stuffed with bone marrow)[3]
- Swan pukā (goat lungs filled with batter and boiled, sliced and fried)[4]
- Takhā (jellied buffalo meat curry)
Vegetable dishes
[edit]- Buba kwā (beans curry)
- Chhon kwā (curry of bamboo shoots and potato)
- Kwāti (soup made of nine types of sprouted beans)
- Mee kwā (curry of fenugreek seeds)
- Pancha kwā (mixed vegetable curry of bamboo shoots, potato, dried mushroom, dried radish and blackeyed pea)
Soups
[edit]- Bullā or ka kwā (soup made of the dregs of rice beer, diced spleen and other meats, bone marrow and bone)
- Chhyāllā (soup made of shredded pickled radish and diced variety meats)
- Pāun kwā (sour soup of Himalayan hog plum)[5]
Festival foods
[edit]- Samaybaji (set of beaten rice, roasted meat, vegetables, cowpea, soybean and ginger)
- Syābaji (parched rice)
Meat dishes
[edit]- Chhoylā (either boiled or smoked, sliced and marinated buffalo meat)
- Ghalmal (mixed curry of diced lentil cake, green vegetables and leftover meat seasoned with Nepal pepper)
- Hāku Chhoylā (roasted, diced and marinated buffalo meat)
- Momochā (dumplings filled with minced buffalo or chicken meat)*
- Kunyā (smoked fish)
Vegetable dishes
[edit]- Chākuhi (boiled sweet potato)
- Hāku Musyā (roasted black soybean mixed with oil and salt)
- Lābhā (chopped garlic greens mixed with spices)
- Pālu (diced raw ginger)
Salads
[edit]- Kaywu (soaked field pea and garden pea)
- Lain (sliced radish)
- Tusi (sliced cucumber)
- laaie (sliced radish )
Dessert
[edit]- Dhau (yogurt)
- Juju Dhau (yogurt/curd originated from Bhaktapur)
- Marichari (may include anything sweet from soft milk based pastries to fried bread dipped in caramel)
- Laakhamari (made from flour and sugar, cooked in hot oil)
- Guulmari (made from flour and sugar, cooked in hot oil)
- Baalbara
- Yomari (made from chaku and floor and steamed like momo)
- Anarsha
- Ainthe-Mari
- Khajuri
- Roowth
- Fini
- Nimki
- Lakshmimari
- Swaari
- Malpha
- Jeeri
- Gud-Paak
- Chimti
- Aiti Mari
Drinks
[edit]- Aylā (liquor)
- Arak (rice beer)
- kaar-Thwon (brown beer)
- hyam-Thwon (red beer)
Utensils
[edit]Newars cook, store and serve food and beverages in containers and utensils made of gold, silver, copper, brass, iron, clay pottery, dried rice stalks, corn leaves and leaves of certain trees sewn together with toothpicks to make plates and bowls. Food is eaten with bare hands. It is customary to wash hands before and after a meal.
- Anti (alcohol jar)
- Bātā (basin)
- Chupi (knife)
- Dhampo (water pot)
- Hāsā (round winnowing tray)
- Karuwā (water jug)
- Kholā (bowl)
- Sali (small clay bowl)
- Somā (earthen wine pitcher)
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Traditional Nepalese dish: Newa cuisine travelsastra.com. Retrieved 29 August 2021
- ^ "On the Importance of Food". Archived from the original on 11 September 2015. Retrieved 30 July 2014.
- ^ Vaidya, Tulasī Rāma; Mānandhara, Triratna; Joshi, Shankar Lal (1993). Social History of Nepal. Anmol Publications. p. 168. ISBN 9788170417996.
- ^ Lonely Planet Nepal. Lonely Planet. 2012. ISBN 9781743213148. Retrieved 27 July 2014.
- ^ Tuladhar, Kamal (2003). English-Nepal Bhasa Dictionary. Kathmandu: J.R. Tuladhar. ISBN 9789993354437.
External links
[edit]- http://www.gorkhapatra.org.np/detail.php?article_id=14534&cat_id=10
- http://www.nepalitimes.com/issue/2003/08/29/Leisure/3918
- http://www.weallnepali.com/recipe/newari-food
- http://www.gfcookingclub.com/tag/newari-food/
- https://www.slowfood.com/worldfood-momo-nepals-most-popular-food/#:~:text=The history of momo in,in the late fifteenth century.