Green papaya salad
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Green papaya saladTemplate:Efn is a spicy salad made from shredded unripe papaya. Originating in Laos, it is a national dish and a cornerstone of Lao cuisine, known locally as tam som or tam mak hoong. The dish exemplifies bold, vibrant flavors, blending sour, spicy, salty, and sweet elements, and holds deep cultural significance in Laos.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="Asian American">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="Culture Trip">Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="Thai Ginger">Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Green papaya salad is also widely popular in Thailand, particularly in the Isan region, which shares close ethnic and cultural ties with Laos due to its predominantly ethnic Lao population. Introduced to Thailand via Isan, the dish—called som tamTemplate:Efn in Thai—became a staple of Thai cuisine and spread nationwide.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Beyond Laos and Thailand, green papaya salad has also gained regional prominence across continental Southeast Asia, including Cambodia,<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Myanmar,<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> and Vietnam.<ref>Template:Citation</ref>
Etymology
The dish is deeply rooted in Lao cuisine, where it is traditionally called tam mak hoong (Template:Langx, Template:IPA, Template:Literal translation) or tam som (Template:Langx, Template:IPA, Template:Literal translation), in which the word tam (Template:Langx) refers to the pounding of ingredients in a mortar, a method of preparation central to Lao and neighboring culinary traditions.
In Thailand, the salad is widely known as som tam (Template:Langx, Template:IPA, Template:RTGS), combining the Thai words som (ส้ม, "sour") and tam (ตำ, "pounded"). In Isan, a region with strong cultural and linguistic ties to Laos, the salad uses Lao-derived names tam bak hung (Template:Langx) or tam som (Template:Langx).
Regional variations and names include:
- Burmese: သင်္ဘောသီးသုပ် (thìn bau: thi: thoùp)
- Khmer: បុកល្ហុង (bok l’hong)
- Rakhine: ပဒကာသီးသုပ် (pədəɡà θí θùp)
- Vietnamese: gỏi đu đủ (a general term for papaya salad, often less spicy)
History
Papayas and chili peppers were introduced to Southeast Asia by the Spanish and Portuguese explorers in the 17th century from the Americas in the Columbian Exchange.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Simon de la Loubère (1642–1729), a French diplomat, mentioned in his book that the cultivation of papaya was already widespread in Siam in 1693.<ref name="siamlaloubereeng">Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Citation</ref>
Although it is unknown when papayas and chili peppers entered Laos specifically, they had already been fully integrated into the Lao territory by the time Jean-Baptiste Pallegoix and Henri Mouhot visited in mid-1800s,<ref name="pallegoix">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="mouhot">Mouhot, Henri, and Ferdinand de. Lanoye. Voyage Dans Les Royaumes De Siam, De Cambodge, De Laos Et Autres Parties Centrales De L'Indo-Chine: Relation Extraite Du Journal Et De La Correspondance De L'auteur. Hachette, 1868. 322. Print</ref> and were listed among key ingredients for preparing main Lao dishes.<ref name="estrade">Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref> The Lao were introduced to papaya (mak hung) from Khmer Loeu living in provinces bordering the southeastern Laos (who called them l'hun or lohung/rohung in Khmer).<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Papaya, among other fruits, were cultivated in Cambodia in the 1500s.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
Green papaya salad was mentioned as a favorite Lao dish by a former Lao politician, Katay Don Sasorith (1904–1959), in a memoir recounting his experience during his primary school years in 1910s.<ref name="sasorith">Template:Cite book</ref> Furthermore, according to the travelogue “Nirat Wang Bang Yi Khan” written in 1869 by Thai poet Khun Phum, the dish was already known among members of the Lao royal family living as war hostages in Bang Yi Khan compound in Bangkok, Siam.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Thai historian Sujit Wongthes has speculated that the green papaya salad originated during the late 18th to early 19th centuries in the communities of ethnic Chinese–Lao settlers living in what is now Central Thailand, where papayas were widely cultivated by Chinese immigrants. The Lao settlers, who were war captives deported from Lan Xang, adopted the ancient Lao tradition of preparing salads from fruits, called tam som, to make salads from papayas. The new dish became known as som tam (the reversed order of tam som) and, along with the papayas, then spread to today's Northeast Thailand following the construction of the Northeastern railway line during the turn of the 19th–20th centuries. The dish became more popular after the opening of Mittraphap Road in 1957, and has since become widely adopted by the ethnic Lao people of both Isan and Laos. Likewise, the hot flavour also spread to Isan and Laos from Central Thailand, which had been introduced to chilli peppers first.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
However, papayas and chili peppers were already integrated in the Lao territory and Lao culinary recipes in mid-1800s to early 1900s<ref name="pallegoix"/><ref name="mouhot"/><ref name="estrade"/><ref name="sasorith"/> while, during the 1950s and 1960s, green papaya salad and other Lao dishes were rarely known in Bangkok. They could only be found around the boxing stadium that gathered boxers and fans from Northeastern Thailand, as well as in mobile food carts outside construction sites with Northeastern workers and gas stations serving long-distance bus drivers. Some believe that som tam gained popularity among the young Thai generations following an active publicity in the 1970s.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Furthermore, it was created using refined recipes of Lao tam som, or tam mak hung,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> likely brought to Bangkok by migrant workers from the Northeast during the mid-1900s.<ref name="sipa2">Template:Cite web</ref> During the standardization of the Thai national cuisine, green papaya salad was among the Northeastern or Lao dishes to be included into the Thai national cuisine and modified by reducing the amount of chilli peppers and increasing the amount of sugar.<ref name="Thai cuisine">Template:Cite journal</ref>
Others believe that som tam has evolved from a Thai dish called pu tam or tam pu (Template:Langx หรือ ตำปู, Template:Lit) mentioned in a recipe by chef, Khunying Plian Phatsakarawong in her 1908 cookbook. This dish shares similarities with modern-day som tam but does not include papaya as an ingredient.<ref name="silpa">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="sipa2"/> The earliest known recipe of som tam in Thailand appeared in the Yaowapha cookbook series by Princess Yaovabha Bongsanid in 1935, which included Som tam ton malako (Template:Langx) or Khao man som tam (Template:Langx). This recipe is similar to som tam as prepared today and includes roasted peanuts and dried shrimp as key ingredients. It is often served with rice cooked in coconut milk.<ref>Template:Citation</ref><ref name="silpa" /><ref name="sipa2" /><ref>Template:Citation</ref>
Preparation
The dish combines the five main basic tastes: the sourness of the lime, spiciness of the chili, saltiness and savoriness of the fish sauce, and sweetness of palm sugar.Template:Disputed inline
Pounded salads in Laos all fall under the parent category of tam som, which may or may not contain green papaya; when no specific type of tam som is mentioned, it is generally understood to refer to green papaya salad. For absolute clarity, however, the name tam maak hoong may be used, since this name means "pounded papaya".
In Thailand, it is customary for a customer to ask the preparer to make the dish suited to the customer's own tastes. To specifically refer to the original style of papaya salad as prepared in Laos or Isan, it is known as Template:Lang or som tam Lao or simply as tam Lao and the dish as prepared in central Thailand may be referred to as som tam Thai.
Traditionally, the local variety of green papaya salad in the streets of Bangkok is very spicy due to the addition of a fistful of chopped hot bird's eye chili. However, with its rising popularity among tourists, it is now often served less spicy than it used to be in the past.
Additional ingredients


Together with the papaya, some or most of the following secondary items are added and pounded in the mortar with the pestle:
- Asparagus beans
- Brined "rice field crabs". These belong to the freshwater crab genera Sayamia, Chulathelphusa, and Esanthelphusa (previously classified as part of the genus Somanniathelphusa), which all belong to the Gecarcinucid crab subfamily Parathelphusinae.<ref>Ponchunchoovong, Samorn (2006). Species identification of Thai Rice-field Crab in the lower north-eastern region of Thailand Template:Webarchive.</ref> found in flooded rice fields and canals. Isan people eat the entire crab, including the shell.
- Chili pepper
- Dried shrimp
- Fish sauce
- Garlic
- Monosodium glutamate
- Hog plums
- Lime slice and lime juice
- Palm sugar
- Shrimp paste
- Fish paste
- Raw Thai eggplant
- Cherry or grape tomatoes (green or ripe)
Green papaya salad is often served with glutinous rice and kai yang/ping gai (grilled chicken). It can also be eaten with fresh rice noodles or simply as a snack by itself with, for instance, crispy pork rinds. The dish is often accompanied by raw green vegetables such as water spinach and white cabbage wedges on the side to mitigate the spiciness of the dish.
Variations
Template:More citations needed section A non-spicy green papaya salad version exists in Laos, Vietnam and Thailand, which is much sweeter; it often contains crushed peanuts and is less likely to have fish paste or brined crab.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Dried brine shrimp are used in this Central Thai version. There are also versions that make use of unripe mangoes, apples, cucumbers, carrots and other firm vegetables or unripe fruit. Besides using varieties of fruits or vegetables as the main ingredient a popular option is to use vermicelli rice noodles wherein the dish is known as tam sua.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Instead of papaya, other ingredients can be used as the main ingredient. Popular variations in Laos and Thailand include the salad with:Template:Citation needed
- Cucumber, usually the small variety (tam maak taeng, tam taengkwa)
- Green and unripe mango (tam maak muang, tam mamuang)
- Green and unripe bananas (tam maak kuai, tam kluai)
- Hard and unripe santol (tam krathon)
- Banana flowers (tam hua pli)
- Malay gooseberry (tam mayom)
- Pomelo (tam som o)
- Mu yo sausage (tam mu yo)
- Mixed fruit (tam phonlamai ruam)
- Coconut rice (khao man som tam)
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Lao papaya salad with pork rinds
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Luang Prabang style Lao papaya salad from Northern Laos
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Lao papaya salad with selected crustacea, mollusks, and shellfish in addition to papaya strips
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Thai green papaya salad with peanuts
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Green papaya salad with brined rice paddy crabs (som tam pu)
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Green papaya salad with mixed fruit (tam phonlamai ruam)
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Green papaya salad with banana flowers (tam hua pli)
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Green papaya salad with mu yo sausage (tam mu yo)
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A variation of the salad with green mango instead of papaya and dried anchovies (tam mamuang pla haeng thot)
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Tam maphrao on sen mi krop: a variation with soft coconut meat and deep-fried rice noodle
Reception
The Thai variation som tam has been listed at number 46 on World's 50 most delicious foods<ref name=":2">Template:Cite web</ref> compiled by CNN Go in 2011<ref name=":3">Template:Cite web</ref> and 2018.<ref name=":4">Template:Cite web</ref>
See also
Note
References
Further reading
- Cummings, Joe. (2000). World Food: Thailand. UK: Lonely Planet Publishers. pp. 157–8. Template:ISBN
- Williams, China ‘’et al.’’. (). ‘’Southeast Asia on a Shoestring: Big Trips on Small Budgets.’’ Lonely Planet. p. 31. Template:ISBN
- Brissenden, Rosemary. (2007). Southeast Asian food: Classic and Modern Dishes from Indonesia, Malaysia, .. Tuttle Publishing. pp. 434 – 439. Template:ISBN
- McDermoot, Nancie. (1992). Real Thai: The Best of Thailand’s Regional Cooking. Chronicle Books. pp. 121 – 146. Template:ISBN
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