Cambodian Cuisine
Kingdom of Wonder
Cambodian cuisine is the lesser-known treasure of Southeast Asia, with delicate, herbaceous flavors and dishes like fish amok and num banh chok that predate Thai and Vietnamese cooking.
A Culinary Portrait
The heritage, flavors, and traditions of Cambodian cuisine
Chinese immigration over centuries introduced stir-frying, noodle soups, and soy-based seasonings. French colonial rule from 1863 to 1953 left baguettes, pate, and a coffee culture that Cambodians transformed with condensed milk and ice. The devastating Khmer Rouge period (1975-1979) nearly destroyed Cambodia's culinary heritage, killing an estimated two million people including countless cooks, food vendors, and holders of traditional knowledge.
The post-conflict rebuilding of Cambodian food culture is an ongoing act of recovery and remembrance. Kroeung (a pounded paste of lemongrass, galangal, turmeric, garlic, and kaffir lime), prahok (fermented fish paste, the defining flavor of Cambodian cooking), palm sugar (used to balance sourness and salt), kaffir lime leaves (aromatic citrus leaves used in soups and curries), and tamarind (providing the sour element essential to Khmer flavor balance).
Cha Houy Teuk
Num Ansom Chek
Key Flavors
Masters of the Kitchen
The chefs who shaped Cambodian cuisine
Rotanak Ros (Chef Nak)
Cambodia's leading chef and cultural ambassador. Her cookbook SAOY won the 2023…
Click to read moreNite Yun
Cambodian-American chef born in a refugee camp who became the acclaimed chef-ow…
Click to read moreEssential Reading
The cookbooks that define Cambodian cuisine
SAOY - Royal Cambodian Home Cuisine
Winner of the 2023 Gourmand Best of Best Cookbook in the World, featuring royal Cambodian recipes originally compiled b…
My Cambodia: A Khmer Cookbook
Over 100 recipes celebrating Khmer and Cambodian American cuisine from the acclaimed chef of Lunette.
Explore All Dishes
2 authentic recipes from Cambodian cuisine