BURMA; rivers of flavor (Random House   Canada, 2012, 372 pages, ISBN 978-0-307-36216-2, $39.95 CAN hard covers) is by   Naomi Duguid, the well-known Canadian author of many other Asian cookbooks for   Random House Canada. Here she travels to   Burma, a   neglected culinary charm: Toronto, with some   relatively rare cuisines, only has one Burmese restaurant, and that one, with a   steam table, caters mostly to students as a takeout place. Burmese   (Myanmar)   cooking is similar to India,   China and   Thailand,   but the spicing is different. For one thing, the Burmese use lots of different   varieties of coriander; for another, there are lots of fresh herbs. Duguid has a   primer on the basics of Burma (she's   been going there for about 25 years), followed by chapters on courses or   ingredients. There are salads, soups, veggies, fish and seafood, chicken, beef,   pork, rice, noodles, sweets and sauces/condiments. There is also a chapter on   drinks in Burma (tea   and tea-shops), as well as beer and liquor (mostly rice liquor or arrack). She   writes two sentences on wines  "Burma is   starting to produce wine at several vineyards in the   Inle   Lake area. The   industry is young but European winemakers are working to bottle light, drinkable   reds and whites." She's also got some brief historical notes, some travel notes   (hardly any credit cards are accepted, there were no ATMs by spring of 2012,   tourist money is only in un-creased US dollars), an expanded glossary of food   terms, and an annotated bibliography. Preparations, usually one to a page with   accompanying food studio photo on the opposite page, have their ingredients   listed in avoirdupois measurements, but there are tables of metric equivalents   on the last page. And, of course, there is a major upside to this book:   excellent location photography by Duguid. This is a first-rate effort, adding to   our knowledge of the Asiatic culinary world.
  Audience and level of use: Duguid fans, Asian food lovers,   those desiring information about obscure cuisines. Let's be apolitical about the   country's administrative function, for here, only food   matters.
  Some interesting or unusual recipes that we tried: curried   chicken livers; intensely green spinach and tomato salad with peanuts; Mandalay   noodles with chicken curry; fried sesame-seed bananas; crispy shallot and dried   shrimp relish; deep-fried chayote fingers; new potatoes with spiced shallot oil;   rice-batter crepes; shan tofu salad; tart-sweet chile-garlic sauce (hot stuff!);   fish cakes and fish balls.
  Quality/Price Rating: 92.
      
 
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