Nom Ansom which is also known as Khmer sticky rice cake, is a traditional dessert used and made to celebrate Pchum Ben. Pchum Ben, also known as Ancestor’s Day, is a Cambodian religious Buddhist festival that happens for 15 days every year and it usually takes place in late September. Almost every year my parents and their friends would make or buy Nom Ansom and bring it to a Buddhist temple to celebrate Pchum Ben. They would all gather and pray together in the temple and then offer the dessert to the monks, relatives, and their ancestors. Nom Ansom is made out of glutinous rice, pork, mung beans, and then it is wrapped with banana leaves. You also tie the dessert with strong plastic strings around it. Once you filled in the pork and mung beans within the rice and wrap it with banana leaves and have it ted, you steam the dessert in the steamer. For some people, it takes about a few hours to make them, but it's worth the time in making Nom Ansom because it’s delicious and many people enjoy eating it.
Cultural Dessert
The purpose of this site is to inform individuals about the different cultural desserts.
Monday, October 1, 2012
Nom Ansom (Rice Sticky Cake)
Nom Ansom which is also known as Khmer sticky rice cake, is a traditional dessert used and made to celebrate Pchum Ben. Pchum Ben, also known as Ancestor’s Day, is a Cambodian religious Buddhist festival that happens for 15 days every year and it usually takes place in late September. Almost every year my parents and their friends would make or buy Nom Ansom and bring it to a Buddhist temple to celebrate Pchum Ben. They would all gather and pray together in the temple and then offer the dessert to the monks, relatives, and their ancestors. Nom Ansom is made out of glutinous rice, pork, mung beans, and then it is wrapped with banana leaves. You also tie the dessert with strong plastic strings around it. Once you filled in the pork and mung beans within the rice and wrap it with banana leaves and have it ted, you steam the dessert in the steamer. For some people, it takes about a few hours to make them, but it's worth the time in making Nom Ansom because it’s delicious and many people enjoy eating it.
Friday, September 28, 2012
Mooncake
Since it is September and the oriental stores are selling mooncakes, it has always been a question of mine of how this is part of my culture. When I was young, my parents would visit our relatives and give them mooncakes. We would cut them up into 6-8 pieces depending on how many people were present and ate them with tea. As kids, we only enjoyed eating the sweet ones that contained the red bean paste or black bean paste. After that, an adult would help us light our lanterns and take us out to walk around the neighborhood singing songs in our native language. There were a variety of flavors such as the red bean paste, lotus seed paste, and dates, nuts, fruit with Chinese sausages and egg yolks.
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