Contrary to popular belief, Lao Cuisine is not the same as Thai Cuisine. Lao Food has its own signatures and deserve recognition for creativity and genuinity. Lao food is spicy and delicious. It is served in communal dishes with meat, fish, chicken and vegetables. Glutinous rice, mostly served with other dishes, is eaten with fingers.
Lao Cuisine – The Raw and the Cooked
Written By Dr. Grant Evans
Reader in Anthropology at the University of Hong Kong
But the occasional visitor to Laos is unlikely to experience such really distinctive Lao food. That is, the Lao taste for things raw rather than cooked. This preference tells you many things about Lao culture and society: for instance, the proximity of most Lao to the “wild” forest where food is still hunted or gathered. A deer shot in the mountains is carried back to the village where it is chopped up into many bowls for laap and the family’s neighbours and friends come and feast and drink. The whole deer is consumed immediately because there are no refrigerators in the villages to keep the meat fresh. Even in the ‘civilised’cooked haute cuisine of Laos the presence of ingredients from the “wild” forest makes it different from Thai food.
The second distinctive dish of the Lao is laap. It is made with fish, chicken, duck, pork, beef, buffalo or with game. The meat and innards are finely chopped and spiced with onion, chillies. and other herbs such as mint. The Lao prefer laap seua, or “Tiger laap”, that is raw chopped meat. But most often you will be served laap of cooked meat, especially in restaurants.
At other times you are likely to be offered a rice vermicelli, or klao poun. This is served cold with a variety of raw chopped vegetables, on which one pours coconut milk sauce flavoured with meat and chillies. It is a favourable dish at wedding and other celebrations, and a favourite with foreigners.
A lovely regional dish is the Or lam from Luang Prabang. This is about as close as the Lao get to something like European stew. Lemon grass, dried buffalo meat and skin, chillies and eggplant along with some pa daek are basic ingredients, but the really distinctive feature is the addition of crisp-fried pork skin and sweet basil.
Soup is also essential at any Lao meal, though one will not find the lovely seafood soups from which Thai cuisine is famous. Try keng no may, a bamboo shoot soup, or keng het bot made with mushrooms.
There are many fish dishes in Laos, but one, unhappily, has disappeared from the table. Pa boek was an extremely large fish which could once be found in the Mekong river and was highly prized. Through over-fishing and other changes to the Mekong river, it is now virtually extinct. Such ecological depredations have led to changes in Thai cuisine as well which once would have been much closer to the Lao. One reads with fascination old travellers tales of central Thailand where rhinoceros and tigers were a major hazard, along with stories of exotic birds and other wild life.