Mohnyin tjin

Mohnyin tjin

Mohnyin Tjin Seller at Taunggyi, May 2010
Place of origin Burma
Associated national cuisine Burmese cuisine
Main ingredients
Similar dishes Kimchi, Chinese pickles
Cookbook: Mohnyin tjin  Media: Mohnyin tjin

Mohnyin Tjin, (မုန်ညင်းချဉ် [mòʊɴɲɪ́ɴ dʑɪ̀ɴ]; also Mon Nyin Jin, Mohn-hnyin Gyin) is a popular Burmese cuisine fermented food dish of vegetables preserved in rice wine and various seasonings. It is similar to Korean Kimchi. Mohnyin Tjin is popularly associated with the Shan and is a ubiquitous condiment for Shan dishes such as meeshay and shan khauk swè.

Mohnnyin tjin is refers to a wide number of pickled and fermented vegetables. The name means "sour mustard green" and pickled daikon leaves are also used in the most common version.

Generically 'a-chin' (pickle) can be made from almost any vegetable.

Main Ingredients

The most common form of mohnyin tjin is actually a mix of mainly daikon leaves, with mustard greens, carrots, leek bulbs, ginger and Garlic chives. These vegetables are pickled in glutinous rice, rice wine, fresh crushed chillis, spices and cane sugar.

The variety is achieved by substituting the vegetables. Other popular 'a-chin' are made with baby elephant garlic, daikon stems, garlic chives, cabbage, cauliflower, chili pepper, bean sprouts, unripe mangoes and bamboo shoots.

See also

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 12/4/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.