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Bhutanese Cuisine
Land of the Thunder Dragon
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Bhutanese cuisine is unique in its liberal use of chilies as a vegetable, not just a seasoning. Ema datshi (chili cheese) defines a cuisine shaped by Himalayan altitudes and Buddhist traditions.
A Culinary Portrait
The heritage, flavors, and traditions of Bhutanese cuisine
Bhutanese cuisine is the fiery, cheese-laden food of the last Himalayan Buddhist kingdom, where chilies are treated as a vegetable rather than a spice and every meal revolves around rice, cheese, and heat. Isolated by towering mountain passes and a deliberate policy of cultural preservation, Bhutan developed a cuisine almost entirely independent of outside influence until the late twentieth century. The staple crops of rice (red rice in the valleys, white rice imported to higher elevations) and buckwheat (in the highlands) have sustained Bhutanese communities for centuries. Tibetan influence is the strongest external force, contributing butter tea, momo dumplings, and noodle soups.
Indian flavors have filtered through the southern border regions. However, Bhutan's cuisine remains remarkably self-contained, with most traditional dishes using only locally produced ingredients. The national obsession with chilies, likely introduced from the Americas via India in the seventeenth century, defines every meal.
Datshi (local cheese made from yak or cow milk) is the other pillar, appearing in virtually every preparation. Chilies (both green and dried red, used as a primary vegetable), datshi (local farmers' cheese), red rice (nutty, partially milled Bhutanese rice), Sichuan pepper (yer ma), and dried beef or yak.
Indian flavors have filtered through the southern border regions. However, Bhutan's cuisine remains remarkably self-contained, with most traditional dishes using only locally produced ingredients. The national obsession with chilies, likely introduced from the Americas via India in the seventeenth century, defines every meal.
Datshi (local cheese made from yak or cow milk) is the other pillar, appearing in virtually every preparation. Chilies (both green and dried red, used as a primary vegetable), datshi (local farmers' cheese), red rice (nutty, partially milled Bhutanese rice), Sichuan pepper (yer ma), and dried beef or yak.
Ara
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Tsheringma Tea
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Masters of the Kitchen
The chefs who shaped Bhutanese cuisine
Aum Tshering Doma
Respected Bhutanese culinary figure who ran a celebrated restaurant and collabo…
Click to read moreEssential Reading
The cookbooks that define Bhutanese cuisine
Foods of the Kingdom of Bhutan
Foods of the Kingdom of Bhutan
Winner of the 2010 Gourmand World Cookbook Award for Best Asian Cuisine Book in the World.
Authentic Bhutanese Cookbook
Authentic Bhutanese Cookbook
A well-illustrated cookbook with photographs for each recipe, featuring simple traditional recipes with clear instructi…
Explore All Dishes
3 authentic recipes from Bhutanese cuisine
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