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Foreplay: Food Porn Just Before the Lunch Hour
Pork larb, Luang Prabang, Laos
With culinary heavyweights Vietnam and Thailand for neighbors, Laos’ cuisine is seemingly always on the losing end of a simile. It’s like Thai, but with less spice…It’s kind of Vietnamese, but not as Vietnamese as Vietnamese.   Sure, it shares the   flora of these tropical countries (thick stalks of water spinach, squat pumpkins as orange and sweet as a  Butterfinger, mountains of feathery herbs so crisp and sharp they clear your sinuses), but it deserves a chance to be considered on its own.
Case in point: Larb is the national dish of Laos, a plucky mix of protein (raw or  cooked, from fish to buffalo) dressed with lime juice, chili, toasted  rice powder and a battery of aromatics—mint, cilantro, holy basil,  lemongrass, and spring onions are all fair game, depending on the cook  in the kitchen. Some extreme versions you’ll come across in the  countryside may be spiked with blood, bile, or other ante-upping  ingredients, but generally speaking, this is a pretty farang-friendly staple, and something you should plan to eat at least once a day during any trip to Laos. Now get going. -MG
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Foreplay: Food Porn Just Before the Lunch Hour

Pork larb, Luang Prabang, Laos

With culinary heavyweights Vietnam and Thailand for neighbors, Laos’ cuisine is seemingly always on the losing end of a simile. It’s like Thai, but with less spice…It’s kind of Vietnamese, but not as Vietnamese as Vietnamese. Sure, it shares the flora of these tropical countries (thick stalks of water spinach, squat pumpkins as orange and sweet as a Butterfinger, mountains of feathery herbs so crisp and sharp they clear your sinuses), but it deserves a chance to be considered on its own.

Case in point: Larb is the national dish of Laos, a plucky mix of protein (raw or cooked, from fish to buffalo) dressed with lime juice, chili, toasted rice powder and a battery of aromatics—mint, cilantro, holy basil, lemongrass, and spring onions are all fair game, depending on the cook in the kitchen. Some extreme versions you’ll come across in the countryside may be spiked with blood, bile, or other ante-upping ingredients, but generally speaking, this is a pretty farang-friendly staple, and something you should plan to eat at least once a day during any trip to Laos. Now get going. -MG

    • #laos
    • #luang prabang
    • #foreplay
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